[100 years ago this week, the brothers Harry and Sam Warner struck a deal with Bell Labs to use their innovative Vitaphone technology in the production of the first sound films for Warner Brothers. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of contexts for talking pictures!]
On two specific
films and one genre that reflect the changing mid-century landscape of
cinematic sounds.
1)
King Kong (1933): Just a half-dozen years after
those first true “talkies” about which I wrote in yesterday’s post, pioneering percussionist
and sound designer Murray Spivack
was faced with a more significant challenge: producing
the noises for the titular monster, along with his fellow prehistoric
creatures, in King Kong. As that second hyperlinked article traces, Spivack
went to great lengths to record various animal noises and other sound effects,
and the results were truly groundbreaking; much of Kong looks and feels as
dated as you’d expect nearly a century later, but the sound effects remain impressive
to this day. And when we remember that Warner Brothers had purchased Vitaphone
less than a decade before, Spivack’s successes become even more impressive
still.
2)
World
War II Newsreels: I’m not going to pretend I have a lot more to add to that
excellent hyperlinked 2014 European Journal of Media Studies article
from (then-) PhD candidate Masha Shpolberg. Nor do I want to suggest (no more
than Shpolberg does) that we should emphasize a topic like film sounds when it
comes to the era and the horrors of the Second World War. But the question of
how the evolving cultural medium of film brought those horrors to audiences far
from combat is a really interesting one, and Shpolberg makes a great case that
newsreels did so through a particularly striking set of sound elements.
3)
Singing in the Rain (1952): I
don’t know exactly when the first films that we could call truly nostalgic for
the early days of Hollywood began to be released, but I like the symbolism of
the very reflective
and metatextual Singing in the Rain coming out exactly 25 years
after the release of The Jazz Singer. But while Singing represented
Hollywood’s earlier days in its content, I agree with this
post from film studies student Gordon Taylor that this early 1950s film
uses sound in “incredible” ways that reflect how far the industry had come in
that quarter-century since Al Jolson’s famous line. Indeed, while of course
there have been further evolutions in the 75 years since Singing, I
would venture to argue that much of the modern age of cinematic sound can be
found by the 1950s.
Next film
sound studying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Examples of sound in film you’d highlight?
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