Dictionary Definition
talky adj : full of trivial conversation; "kept
from her housework by gabby neighbors" [syn: chatty, gabby, garrulous, loquacious, talkative] [also: talkiest, talkier]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- In the context of "of a person": talkative or loquacious
- In the context of "of a book etc": containing much dialogue
See also
Extensive Definition
A sound film is a motion picture with synchronized sound, or
sound technologically coupled to image, as opposed to a silent film.
The first known public exhibition of projected sound films took
place in Paris in 1900, but decades would pass before reliable
synchronization was made commercially practical. The first
commercial screening of movies with fully synchronized sound took
place in New York City in April 1923. In the early years after the
introduction of sound, films incorporating synchronized dialogue
were known as "talking pictures," or "talkies." The first feature-length
movie originally presented as a talkie was
The Jazz Singer, released in October 1927.
By the early 1930s, the talkies were a global
phenomenon. In the United States, they helped secure
Hollywood's position as one of the world's most powerful
cultural/commercial systems. In Europe (and, to a lesser degree,
elsewhere) the new development was treated with suspicion by many
filmmakers and critics, who worried that a focus on dialogue would
subvert the unique aesthetic virtues of soundless cinema. In
Japan,
where the popular film tradition integrated silent movie and live
vocal performance, talking pictures were slow to take root. In
India,
sound was the transformative element that led to the rapid
expansion of the nation's film industry—the most productive such
industry in the world since the early 1960s.
History
Early steps
details Kinetoscope The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as the concept of cinema itself. On February 27, 1888, a couple of days after photographic pioneer Eadweard Muybridge gave a lecture not far from the laboratory of Thomas Edison, the two inventors privately met. Muybridge later claimed that on this occasion, six years before the first commercial motion picture exhibition, he proposed a scheme for sound cinema that would combine his image-casting zoopraxiscope with Edison's recorded-sound technology. No agreement was reached, but within a year Edison commissioned the development of the Kinetoscope, essentially a "peep-show" system, as a visual complement to his cylinder phonograph. The two devices were brought together as the Kinetophone in 1895, but individual, cabinet viewing of motion pictures was soon to be outmoded by successes in film projection. In 1899, a projected sound-film system known as Cinemacrophonograph or Phonorama, based primarily on the work of Swiss-born inventor François Dussaud, was exhibited in Paris; similar to the Kinetophone, the system required individual use of earphones. An improved cylinder-based system, Phono-Cinéma-Théâtre, was developed by Clément-Maurice Gratioulet and Henri Lioret of France, allowing short films of theater, opera, and ballet excerpts to be presented at the Paris Exposition in 1900. These appear to be the first publicly exhibited films with projection of both image and recorded sound.Three major problems persisted, leading to motion
pictures and sound recording largely taking separate paths for a
generation:
- Synchronization – The pictures and sound were recorded and played back by separate devices, which were difficult to start and maintain in synchronization.
- Playback volume – While motion picture projectors soon allowed film to be shown to large theater audiences, audio technology before the development of electric amplification could not project to satisfactorily fill large spaces.
- Recording fidelity – The primitive systems of the era produced sound of very low quality unless the performers were stationed directly in front of the cumbersome recording devices (acoustical horns, for the most part), imposing severe limits on the sort of films that could be created with live-recorded sound.
Innovations continued on other fronts, as well.
In 1907, French-born, London-based Eugene
Lauste—who had worked at Edison's lab between 1886 and 1892—was
awarded the first patent for sound-on-film
technology, involving the transformation of sound into light waves
that are photographically recorded direct onto celluloid. As described by
historian Scott Eyman,
[I]t was a double system, that is, the sound was
on a different piece of film from the picture.... In essence, the
sound was captured by a microphone and translated into light waves
via a light valve, a thin ribbon of sensitive metal over a tiny
slit. The sound reaching this ribbon would be converted into light
by the shivering of the diaphragm, focusing the resulting light
waves through the slit, where it would be photographed on the side
of the film, on a strip about a tenth of an inch wide.
Though sound-on-film would eventually become the
universal standard for synchronized sound cinema, Lauste never
successfully exploited his innovations, which came to an effective
dead end. In 1913, Edison introduced a new cylinder-based
synch-sound apparatus known, just like his 1895 system, as the
Kinetophone; instead of films being shown to individual viewers in
the kinetoscope cabinet, they were now projected onto a screen. The
phonograph was connected by an intricate arrangement of pulleys to
the film projector, allowing—under ideal conditions—for
synchronization. Conditions, however, were rarely ideal, and the
new, improved Kinetophone was retired after little more than a
year. In 1914, Finnish inventor Eric
Tigerstedt was granted German patent 309,536 for his
sound-on-film work; that same year, he apparently demonstrated a
film made with the process to an audience of scientists in
Berlin.
Other sound films, based on a variety of systems,
were made before the 1920s, mostly of performers lip-synching
to previously made audio recordings. The technology was far from
adequate to big-league commercial purposes, and for many years the
heads of the
major Hollywood film studios saw little benefit in producing
sound motion pictures. Thus such films were relegated, along with
color movies, to the status of novelty.
Crucial innovations
A number of technological developments
contributed to making sound cinema commercially viable by the late
1920s. Two involved contrasting approaches to synchronized sound
reproduction, or playback: Advanced sound-on-film – In 1919,
American inventor Lee De
Forest was awarded several patents that would lead to the first
sound-on-film technology with commercial application. In De
Forest's system, the sound track was photographically recorded on
to the side of the strip of motion picture film to create a
composite, or "married," print. If proper synchronization of sound
and picture was achieved in recording, it could be absolutely
counted on in playback. Over the next four years, he improved his
system with the help of equipment and patents licensed from another
American inventor in the field, Theodore
Case.
At the
University of Illinois, Polish-born research engineer
Joseph Tykociński-Tykociner was working independently on a
similar process. On June 9, 1922, he gave the
first reported U.S. demonstration of a sound-on-film motion picture
to members of the
American Institute of Electrical Engineers. As with Lauste and
Tigerstedt, Tykociner's system would never be taken advantage of
commercially; De Forest's, however, soon would.
On April 15,
1923, at New
York City's Rivoli Theater, came the first commercial screening of
motion pictures with sound-on-film, the future standard: a set of
shorts under the banner of De Forest
Phonofilms, accompanying a silent feature. That June, De Forest
entered into an extended legal battle with an employee, Freeman
Harrison Owens, for title to one of the crucial Phonofilm
patents. Although De Forest ultimately won the case in the courts,
Owens is today recognized as a central innovator in the field. The
following year, De Forest's studio released the first commercial
dramatic film shot as a talking picture—the two-reeler Love's Old
Sweet Song, directed by J. Searle Dawley and featuring Una Merkel.
Phonofilms' stock in trade, however, was not original dramas but
celebrity documentaries, popular music acts, and comedy
performances. President Calvin
Coolidge, opera singer Abbie
Mitchell, and vaudeville stars such as Phil Baker,
Ben
Bernie, Eddie
Cantor, and Oscar Levant
appeared in the firm's pictures. Hollywood remained suspicious,
even fearful, of the new technology. As Photoplay editor
James Quirk put it in March 1924, "Talking pictures are perfected,
says Dr. Lee De Forest. So is castor oil." De Forest's process
continued to be used through 1927 in the United States for dozens
of short Phonofilms; in the UK it was employed a few years longer
for both shorts and features by British Sound Film Productions, a
subsidiary of British Talking Pictures, which purchased the primary
Phonofilm assets. By the end of 1930, the Phonofilm business would
be liquidated.
In Europe, others were also working on the
development of sound-on-film. In 1919, the same year that DeForest
received his first patents in the field, three German inventors
patented the Tri-Ergon sound
system. On September
17, 1922,
the Tri-Ergon group gave a public screening of sound-on-film
productions—including a dramatic talkie, Der Brandstifter (The
Arsonist)—before an invited audience at the Alhambra Kino in
Berlin. By the end of the decade, Tri-Ergon would be the dominant
European sound system. In 1923, two Danish engineers, Axel Petersen
and Arnold Poulsen, patented a system in which sound was recorded
on a separate filmstrip running parallel with the image reel.
Gaumont would license and briefly put the technology to commercial
use under the name Cinéphone.
It was domestic competition, however, that would
lead to Phonofilms' eclipse. By September 1925, De Forest and
Case's working arrangement had fallen through. The following July,
Case joined with Fox Film,
Hollywood's third largest studio, to
found the Fox-Case Corporation. The system developed by Case and
his assistant, Earl Sponable, given the name Movietone,
thus became the first viable sound-on-film technology controlled by
a Hollywood movie studio. The following year, Fox purchased the
North American rights to the Tri-Ergon system, though the company
found it inferior to Movietone and virtually impossible to
integrate the two different systems to advantage. In 1927, as well,
Fox retained the services of Freeman Owens, who had particular
expertise in constructing cameras for synch-sound film.
Advanced sound-on-disc – Parallel with
improvements in sound-on-film technology, a number of companies
were making progress with systems in which movie sound was recorded
onto phonograph discs. In sound-on-disc technology from the era, a
phonograph turntable is connected by a mechanical interlock to a specially
modified film
projector, allowing for synchronization. In 1921, the Photokinema
sound-on-disc system developed by Orlando Kellum was employed to
add synchronized sound sequences to D. W.
Griffith's failed silent film Dream Street. A love song,
performed by star Ralph Graves, was recorded, as was a sequence of
live vocal effects. Apparently, dialogue scenes were also recorded,
but the results were unsatisfactory and the film was never publicly
screened incorporating them. On May 1, 1921, Dream Street was
rereleased, with love song added, at New York City's Town Hall
theater, qualifying it—however haphazardly—as the first
feature-length film with a live-recorded vocal sequence. There
would be no others for more than six years. In 1925, Warner
Bros., then a small Hollywood studio with big ambitions, began
experimenting with sound-on-disc systems at New York's Vitagraph
Studios, which it had recently purchased. The Warner Bros.
technology, named Vitaphone, was
publicly introduced on August 6,
1926, with the
premiere of the nearly three-hour-long Don
Juan; the first feature-length movie to employ a synchronized
sound system of any type throughout, its soundtrack contained a
musical score and
sound
effects, but no recorded dialogue—in other words, it had been
staged and shot as a silent film. Accompanying Don Juan, however,
were eight shorts of musical performances, mostly classical, as
well as a four-minute filmed introduction by Will H.
Hays, president of the
Motion Picture Association of America, all with live-recorded
sound. These were the first true sound films exhibited by a
Hollywood studio. Don Juan would not go into general release until
February of the following year, making the technically similar The
Better 'Ole, put out by Warner Bros. in October 1926, the first
feature film with synchronized playback throughout to show to a
broad audience.
Sound-on-film would ultimately win out over
sound-on-disc because of a number of fundamental technical
advantages:
- Synchronization: no interlock system was completely reliable, and sound could fall out of synch due to disc skipping or minute changes in film speed, requiring constant supervision and frequent manual adjustment
- Editing: discs could not be directly edited, severely limiting the ability to make alterations in their accompanying films after the original release cut
- Distribution: phonograph discs added extra expense and complication to film distribution
- Wear and tear: the physical process of playing the discs degraded them, requiring their replacement after approximately twenty screenings
Nonetheless, in the early years, sound-on-disc
had the edge over sound-on-film in two substantial ways:
- Production and capital cost: it was generally less expensive to record sound onto disc than onto film and the central exhibition systems—turntable/interlock/projector—were cheaper to manufacture than the complex image-and-audio-pattern-reading projectors required by sound-on-film
- Audio quality: phonograph discs, Vitaphone's in particular, had superior dynamic range to most sound-on-film processes of the day, at least during the first few playings—while sound-on-film tended to have better frequency response, this was outweighed by greater distortion and noise
As sound-on-film technology improved, both of
these disadvantages were overcome.
The third crucial set of innovations marked a
major step forward in both the live recording of sound and its
effective playback: Fidelity electronic recording and amplification
– Beginning in 1922, the research branch of AT&T's
Western
Electric manufacturing division began working intensively on
recording technology for both sound-on-disc and sound-on film. In
1925, the company publicly introduced a greatly improved system of
electronic audio, including sensitive
condenser microphones and rubber-line recorders. That May, the
company licensed entrepreneur Walter J. Rich to exploit the system
for commercial motion pictures; he founded Vitagraph, which Warner
Bros. acquired a half interest in just one month later. In April
1926, Warners signed a contract with AT&T for exclusive use of
its film sound technology for the redubbed Vitaphone operation,
leading to the production of Don Juan and its accompanying shorts
over the following months. During the period when Vitaphone had
exclusive access to the patents, the fidelity of recordings made
for Warners films was markedly superior to those made for the
company's sound-on-film competitors. Meanwhile, Bell Labs—the
new name for the AT&T research operation—was working at a
furious pace on sophisticated sound amplification technology that
would allow recordings to be played back over loudspeakers at
theater-filling volume. The new moving-coil speaker system was
installed in New York's Warners Theatre at the end of July and its
patent submission, for what Western Electric called the No. 555
Receiver, was filed on August 4, just
two days before the premiere of Don Juan.
Late in the year, AT&T/Western Electric
created a licensing division, Electrical Research Products Inc.
(ERPI), to handle rights to the company's film-related audio
technology. Vitaphone still had legal exclusivity, but having
lapsed in its royalty payments, effective control of the rights was
in ERPI's hands. On December 31,
1926, Warners
granted Fox-Case a sublicense for the use of the Western Electric
system in exchange for a share of revenues that would go directly
to ERPI. The patents of all three concerns were cross-licensed.
Superior recording and amplification technology was now available
to two Hollywood studios, pursuing two very different methods of
sound reproduction. The new year would finally see the emergence of
sound cinema as a significant commercial medium.
Triumph of the "talkies"
In February 1927, an agreement was signed by five leading Hollywood movie companies: the so-called Big Two—Paramount and MGM—a pair of studios in the next rank—Universal and the fading First National—and Cecil B. DeMille's small but prestigious Producers Distributing Corporation (PDC). The five studios agreed to collectively select just one provider for sound conversion. The alliance then sat back and waited to see what sort of results the forerunners came up with. In May, Warner Bros. sold back its exclusivity rights to ERPI (along with the Fox-Case sublicense) and signed a new royalty contract similar to Fox's for use of Western Electric technology. As Fox and Warners pressed forward with sound cinema in different directions, both technologically and commercially—Fox with newsreels and then scored dramas, Warners with talking features—so did ERPI, which sought to corner the market by signing up the five allied studios. The big sound film sensations of the year all took advantage of pre-existing celebrity. On May 20, 1927, at New York's Roxy Theater, Fox Movietone presented a sound film of the takeoff of Charles Lindbergh's celebrated flight to Paris, recorded earlier that day. In June, a Fox sound newsreel depicting his return welcomes in New York and Washington, D.C., was shown. These were the two most acclaimed sound motion pictures to date. In May, as well, Fox had released the first Hollywood fiction film with synchronized dialogue: the short They're Coming to Get Me, starring comedian Chic Sale. After rereleasing a few silent feature hits, such as Seventh Heaven, with recorded music, Fox came out with its first original Movietone feature on September 23: Sunrise, by acclaimed German director F. W. Murnau. As with Don Juan, the film's soundtrack was comprised of a musical score and sound effects (including, in a couple of crowd scenes, "wild", nonspecific vocals). Then, on October 6, 1927, Warner Bros.' The Jazz Singer premiered. It was a smash box office success for the mid-level studio, earning a total of $2.625 million in the U.S. and abroad, almost a million dollars more than the previous record for a Warners film. Produced with the Vitaphone system, most of the film does not contain live-recorded audio, relying, like Sunrise and Don Juan, on a score and effects. When the movie's star, Al Jolson, sings, however, the film shifts to sound recorded on the set, including both his musical performances and two scenes with ad-libbed speech—one of Jolson's character, Jakie Rabinowitz (Jack Robin), addressing a cabaret audience; the other an exchange between him and his mother. Though the success of The Jazz Singer was due largely to Jolson, already established as one of America's biggest music stars, and its limited use of synchronized sound hardly qualified it as an innovative sound film (let alone the "first"), the movie's handsome profits were proof enough to the industry that the technology was worth investing in.The development of commercial sound cinema had
proceeded in fits and starts before The Jazz Singer, and the film's
success did not change things overnight. Not till May 1928 did the
group of four big studios (PDC had dropped out of the alliance),
along with United
Artists and others, sign with ERPI for conversion of production
facilities and theaters for sound film. Initially, all ERPI-wired
theaters were made Vitaphone-compatible; most were equipped to
project Movietone reels as well. Even with access to both
technologies, however, most of the Hollywood companies remained
slow to produce talking features of their own. No studio beside
Warner Bros. released even a part-talking feature until the
low-budget-oriented
Film Booking Offices of America (FBO) premiered The Perfect
Crime on June
17, 1928,
eight months after The Jazz Singer. FBO had come under the
effective control of a Western Electric competitor, General
Electric's RCA division, which was
looking to market its new sound-on-film system, Photophone.
Unlike Fox-Case's Movietone and De Forest's Phonofilm, which were
variable-density systems, Photophone was a variable-area system—a
refinement in the way the audio signal was inscribed on film that
would ultimately become the rule. (In both sorts of system, a
specially designed lamp, whose exposure
to the film is determined by the audio input, is used to record
sound photographically as a series of minuscule lines. In a
variable-density process, the lines are of varying darkness; in a
variable-area process, the lines are of varying width.) By October,
the FBO-RCA alliance would lead to the creation of Hollywood's
newest major studio, RKO
Pictures. Meanwhile, Warner Bros. had released three more
talkies in the spring, all profitable, if not at the level of the
The Jazz Singer: In March, The Tenderloin appeared; it was billed
by Warners as the first feature in which characters spoke their
parts, though only 15 of its 88 minutes had dialogue. Glorious
Betsy followed in April, and The Lion and the Mouse (31 minutes of
dialogue) in May. On July 6, 1928, the first
all-talking feature, Lights
of New York, premiered. The film cost Warner Bros. only $23,000
to produce, but grossed $1.252 million, a record rate of return
surpassing 5,000%. In September, the studio released another Al
Jolson part-talking picture, The
Singing Fool, which more than doubled The Jazz Singers earnings
record for a Warners movie. This second Jolson screen smash
demonstrated the movie musical's ability to turn a song into a
national hit: by the following summer, the Jolson number "Sonny
Boy" had racked up 2 million record and 1.25 million sheet music
sales. September 1928 also saw the release of Paul
Terry's Dinner Time,
among the first animated
cartoons produced with synchronized sound. After seeing it,
Walt
Disney decided to make one of his Mickey Mouse
shorts,
Steamboat
Willie, with sound as well.
Over the course of 1928, as Warner Bros. began to
rake in huge profits due to the popularity of its sound films, the
other studios quickened the pace of their conversion to the new
technology. Paramount, the industry leader, put out its first
talkie in late September, Beggars of Life; though it had just a few
lines of dialogue, it demonstrated the studio's recognition of the
new medium's power. Interference, Paramount's first all-talker,
debuted in November. The process known as "goat glanding" briefly
became widespread: soundtracks, sometimes including a smatter of
post-dubbed dialogue or song, were added to movies that had been
shot, and in some cases released, as silents. A few minutes of
singing could qualify such a newly endowed film as a "musical."
(Griffith's Dream Street had essentially been a "goat gland.")
Expectations swiftly changed, and the sound "fad" of 1927 became
standard procedure by 1929. In February 1929, sixteen months after
The Jazz Singers debut, Columbia
Pictures became the last of the eight studios that would be
known as "majors"
during Hollywood's Golden Age to release its first part-talking
feature, Lone Wolf's Daughter. Most American movie theaters,
especially outside of urban areas, were still not equipped for
sound and the studios were not entirely convinced of the talkies'
universal appeal—through mid-1930, the majority of Hollywood movies
were produced in dual versions, silent as well as talking. Though
few in the industry predicted it, silent film as a viable
commercial medium in the United States would soon be little more
than a memory. The final mainstream purely silent feature put out
by a major Hollywood studio was the Hoot Gibson
oater
Points West, released by Universal Pictures in August 1929. One
month earlier, the first all-color, all-talking feature had gone
into general release: Warner Bros.' On with
the Show!
The transition: Europe
The Jazz Singer had its European sound premiere at the Piccadilly Theatre in London on September 27, 1928. According to film historian Rachael Low, "Many in the industry realized at once that a change to sound production was inevitable." On January 16, 1929, the first European feature film with a synchronized vocal performance and recorded score premiered: the German production Ich küsse Ihre Hand, Madame (I Kiss Your Hand, Madame). A dialogueless film that contains only a few minutes of singing by star Richard Tauber, it may be thought of as the Old World's combination Dream Street and Don Juan. The movie was made with the sound-on-film system controlled by the German-Dutch firm Tobis, corporate heirs to the Tri-Ergon concern. With an eye toward commanding the emerging European market for sound film, Tobis entered into a compact with its chief competitor, Klangfilm, a subsidiary of Allgemeine Elektrizitäts Gesellschaft (AEG). Early in 1929, the two businesses began comarketing their recording and playback technologies. As ERPI began to wire theaters around Europe, Tobis-Klangfilm claimed that the Western Electric system infringed on the Tri-Ergon patents, stalling the introduction of American technology in many places. Just as RCA had entered the movie business to maximize the value of its recording system, Tobis also established its own production houses, led by Germany's Tobis Filmkunst. Over the course of 1929, most of the major European filmmaking countries began joining Hollywood in the changeover to sound. Many of the trend-setting European talkies were shot abroad as production companies leased studios while their own were being converted or as they deliberately targeted markets speaking different languages. One of Europe's first two feature-length dramatic talkies was created in still a different sort of twist on multinational moviemaking: The Crimson Circle was a coproduction between director Friedrich Zelnik's Efzet-Film company and British Sound Film Productions (BSFP). In 1928, the film had been released as the silent Der Rote Kreis in Germany, where it was shot; English dialogue was apparently dubbed in much later using the De Forest Phonofilm process controlled by BSFP's corporate parent. It was given a British trade screening in March 1929, as was a part-talking film made entirely in the UK: The Clue of the New Pin, a British Lion production using the sound-on-disc British Photophone system. In May, Black Waters, a British and Dominions Film Corporation promoted as the first UK all-talker, received its initial trade screening; it had been shot completely in Hollywood with a Western Electric sound-on-film system. None of these pictures made much impact. The first successful European dramatic talkie was the all-British Blackmail. Directed by twenty-nine-year-old Alfred Hitchcock, the movie had its London debut June 21, 1929. Originally shot as a silent, Blackmail was restaged to include dialogue sequences, along with a score and sound effects, before its premiere. A British International Pictures (BIP) production, it was recorded on RCA Photophone, General Electric having bought a share of AEG in order to gain access to the Tobis-Klangfilm markets. Blackmail was a substantial hit; critical response was also positive—notorious curmudgeon Hugh Castle, for example, called it "perhaps the most intelligent mixture of sound and silence we have yet seen."On August 23, the
modest-sized Austrian film industry came out with a talkie:
G’schichten aus der Steiermark (Stories from Styria), an Eagle
Film–Ottoton Film production. On September
30, the first entirely German-made feature-length dramatic
talkie, Das Land ohne Frauen (Land Without Women), premiered. A
Tobis Filmkunst production, about one-quarter of the movie
contained dialogue, which was strictly segregated from the special
effects and music. The response was underwhelming. Sweden's first
talkie, Konstgjorda Svensson (Artificial Svensson), premiered on
October
14. Eight days later, Aubert Franco-Film came out with Le
Collier de la reine (The Queen's Necklace), shot at the Epinay
studio near Paris. Conceived as a silent film, it was given a
Tobis-recorded score and a single talking sequence—the first
dialogue scene in a French feature. On October 31,
Les Trois masques debuted; a Pathé-Natan
film, it is generally regarded as the initial French feature
talkie, though it was shot, like Blackmail, at the Elstree
studio, just outside of London. The production company had
contracted with RCA Photophone and Britain then had the nearest
facility with the system. The Braunberger-Richebé talkie La Route
est belle, also shot at Elstree, followed a few weeks later. Before
the Paris studios were fully sound-equipped—a process that
stretched well into 1930—a number of other early French talkies
were shot in Germany. The first all-talking German feature,
Atlantik, had premiered in Berlin on October 28.
Yet another Elstree-made movie, it was rather less German at heart
than Les Trois masques and La Route est belle were French; a BIP
production with a British scenarist and German director, it was
also shot in English as Atlantic. The entirely German Aafa-Film
production Dich hab ich geliebt (Because I Loved You) opened
three-and-a-half weeks later. It was not "Germany's First Talking
Film", as the marketing had it, but it was the first to be released
in the United States. In 1930, the first Polish talkies premiered,
using sound-on-disc systems: Moralność pani Dulskiej (The Morality
of Mrs. Dulska) in March and the all-talking Niebezpieczny romans
(Dangerous Love Affair) in October. In Italy, whose once vibrant
film industry had become moribund by the late 1920s, the first
talkie, La Canzone dell'amore (The Song of Love), also came out in
October; within two years, Italian cinema would be enjoying a
revival. The first movie spoken in Czech debuted in 1930 as well,
Tonka Šibenice (Gallows Toni). Several European nations with minor
positions in the field also produced their first talking
pictures—Belgium (in French), Denmark, Greece, and Romania. The
Soviet Union's robust film industry came out with its first sound
features in 1931: Dziga
Vertov's nonfiction Entuziazm, with an experimental,
dialogueless soundtrack, was released in the spring. In the fall,
the Nikolai Ekk drama Putyovka v zhizn (The Road to Life),
premiered as the state's first talking picture.
Throughout much of Europe, conversion of
exhibition venues lagged well behind production capacity, requiring
talkies to be produced in parallel silent versions or simply shown
without sound in many places. While the pace of conversion was
relatively swift in Britain—with over 60 percent of theaters
equipped for sound by the end of 1930, similar to the U.S.
figure—in France, by contrast, more than half of theaters
nationwide were still projecting in silence by late 1932. According
to scholar Colin G. Crisp, "Anxiety about resuscitating the flow of
silent films was frequently expressed in the [French] industrial
press, and a large section of the industry still saw the silent as
a viable artistic and commercial prospect till about 1935." The
situation was particularly acute in the Soviet Union; as of spring
1933, fewer than one out of every hundred film projectors in the
country was as yet equipped for sound.
The transition: Asia
During the 1920s and 1930s, Japan was one of the world's two largest producers of motion pictures, along with the United States. Though the country's film industry was among the first to produce both sound and talking features, the full changeover to sound proceeded much more slowly than in the West. It appears that the first Japanese sound film, Reimai (Dawn), was made in 1926 with the De Forest Phonofilm system. Using the sound-on-disc Minatoki system, the leading Nikkatsu studio produced a pair of talkies in 1929: Taii no musume (The Captain's Daughter) and Furusato (Hometown), the latter directed by Mizoguchi Kenji. The rival Shochiku studio began the successful production of sound-on-film talkies in 1931 using a variable-density process called Tsuchibashi. Two years later, however, more than 80 percent of movies made in the country were still silents. Two of the country's leading directors, Ozu Yasujiro and Naruse Mikio, did not make their first sound films until 1935. As late as 1938, over a third of all movies produced in Japan were shot without dialogue.The enduring popularity of the silent medium in
Japanese cinema owed in great part to the tradition of the benshi, a live narrator who
performed as accompaniment to a film screening. As director
Kurosawa
Akira later described, the benshi "not only recounted the plot
of the films, they enhanced the emotional content by performing the
voices and sound effects and providing evocative descriptions of
events and images on the screen.... The most popular narrators were
stars in their own right, solely responsible for the patronage of a
particular theatre." Film historian Mariann Lewinsky argues,
The end of silent film in the West and in Japan
was imposed by the industry and the market, not by any inner need
or natural evolution.... Silent cinema was a highly pleasurable and
fully mature form. It didn't lack anything, least in Japan, where
there was always the human voice doing the dialogues and the
commentary. Sound films were not better, just more economical. As a
cinema owner you didn't have to pay the wages of musicians and
benshi any more. And a good benshi was a star demanding star
payment.
By the same token, the viability of the benshi
system facilitated a gradual transition to sound—allowing the
studios to spread out the capital costs of conversion and their
directors and technical crews time to become familiar with the new
technology. The Mandarin-language Gēnǚ hóng mǔdān (, Singsong Girl
Red Peony), starring Butterfly Wu, premiered as China's first
feature talkie in 1930. By February of that year, production was
apparently completed on a sound version of The Devil's Playground,
arguably qualifying it as the first Australian talking motion
picture; however, the May press screening of Commonwealth Film
Contest prizewinner Fellers is the first verifiable public
exhibition of an Australian talkie. In September 1930, a song
performed by Indian star Sulochana,
excerpted from the silent feature Madhuri (1928), was released as a
synchronized-sound short, making it that nation's mini–Dream
Street. The following year, Ardeshir
Irani directed the first Indian talking feature, the Hindi-Urdu
Alam
Ara, and produced Kalidas, primarily in Tamil with some Telugu.
Nineteen-thirty-one also saw the first Bengali-language film, Jamai
Sasthi, and the first movie fully spoken in Telugu, Bhakta
Prahlada. In 1932, Ayodhyecha Raja became the first movie in which
Marathi was spoken to be released (though Sant Tukaram was the
first to go through the official censorship process); the first
Gujarati-language film, Narsimha Mehta, and all-Tamil talkie,
Kalava, debuted as well. The next year, Ardeshir Irani produced the
first Persian-language talkie, Dukhtar-e-loor. Also in 1933, the
first Cantonese-language films were produced in Hong Kong—Sha zai
dongfang (The Idiot's Wedding Night) and Liang xing (Conscience);
within two years, the local film industry had fully converted to
sound. Korea,
where byeonsa held a role and status similar to that of the
Japanese benshi, in 1935 became the last country with a significant
film industry to produce its first talking picture: Chunhyangjeon
(/) is based on the seventeenth-century pansori folktale "Chunhyangga,"
of which as many as fourteen film versions have been made to
date.
Consequences
Technology
In the short term, the introduction of live sound recording caused major difficulties in production. Cameras were noisy, so a soundproofed cabinet was used in many of the earliest talkies to isolate the loud equipment from the actors, at the expense of a drastic reduction in the ability to move the camera. For a time, multiple-camera shooting was used to compensate for the loss of mobility and innovative studio technicians could often find ways to liberate the camera for particular shots. The necessity of staying within range of still microphones meant that actors also often had to limit their movements unnaturally. Show Girl in Hollywood (1930), from First National Pictures (which Warner Bros. had taken control of thanks to its profitable adventure into sound), gives a behind-the-scenes look at some of the techniques involved in shooting early talkies. Several of the fundamental problems caused by the transition to sound were soon solved with new camera casings, known as "blimps," designed to suppress noise and boom microphones that could be held just out of frame and moved with the actors. In 1931, a major improvement in playback fidelity was introduced: three-way speaker systems in which sound was separated into low, medium, and high frequencies and sent respectively to a large bass "woofer," a midrange driver, and a treble "tweeter."As David
Bordwell describes, technological improvements continued at a
swift pace: "Between 1932 and 1935, [Western Electric and RCA]
created directional microphones, increased the frequency range of
film recording, reduced ground noise...and extended the volume
range." These technical advances often meant new aesthetic
opportunities: "Increasing the fidelity of recording...heightened
the dramatic possibilities of vocal timbre, pitch, and loudness."
Another basic problem—famously spoofed in the 1952 film
Singin' in the Rain—was that some silent-era actors simply did
not have attractive voices; though this issue was frequently
overstated, there were related concerns about general vocal quality
and the casting of performers for their dramatic skills in roles
also requiring singing talent beyond their own. By 1935,
rerecording of vocals by the original or different actors in
postproduction, a process known as "looping," had become practical.
The ultraviolet recording system introduced by RCA in 1936 improved
the reproduction of sibilants and high notes.
With Hollywood's wholesale adoption of the
talkies, the competition between the two fundamental approaches to
sound-film production was soon resolved. Over the course of
1930–31, the only major players using sound-on-disc, Warner Bros.
and First National, changed over to sound-on-film recording.
Vitaphone's dominating presence in sound-equipped theaters,
however, meant that for years to come all of the Hollywood studios
pressed and distributed sound-on-disc versions of their films
alongside the sound-on-film prints. Fox Movietone soon followed
Vitaphone into disuse as a recording and reproduction method,
leaving two major American systems: the variable-area RCA
Photophone and Western Electric's own variable-density process, a
substantial improvement on the cross-licensed Movietone. Under
RCA's instigation, the two parent companies made their projection
equipment compatible, meaning films shot with one system could be
screened in theaters equipped for the other. This left one big
issue—the Tobis-Klangfilm challenge. In May 1930, Western Electric
won an Austrian lawsuit that voided protection for certain
Tri-Ergon patents, helping bring Tobis-Klangfilm to the negotiating
table. The following month an accord was reached on patent
cross-licensing, full playback compatibility, and the division of
the world into three parts for the provision of equipment. As a
contemporary report describes:
Tobis-Klangfilm has the exclusive rights to
provide equipment for: Germany, Danzig, Austria, Hungary,
Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, Holland, the Dutch Indies, Denmark,
Sweden, Norway, Bulgaria, Romania, Yugoslavia, and Finland. The
Americans have the exclusive rights for the United States, Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, India, and Russia. All other countries,
among them Italy, France, and England, are open to both
parties.
The agreement did not resolve all the patent
disputes, and further negotiations were undertaken and concords
signed over the course of the 1930s. During these years, as well,
the American studios began abandoning the Western Electric system
for RCA Photophone's variable-area approach—by the end of 1936,
only Paramount, MGM, and United Artists still had contracts with
ERPI.
Labor
While the introduction of sound led to a boom in the motion picture industry, it had an adverse effect on the employability of a host of Hollywood actors of the time. Suddenly those without stage experience were regarded as suspect by the studios; as suggested above, those whose heavy accents or otherwise discordant voices had previously been concealed were particularly at risk. The career of major silent star Norma Talmadge effectively came to an end in this way. The celebrated Swiss actor Emil Jannings returned to Europe. John Gilbert's voice was fine, but audiences found it an awkward match with his swashbuckling persona, and his star faded as well. Clara Bow's speaking voice was sometimes blamed for the demise of her brilliant career, but the truth is that she was too hot to handle. Audiences now seemed to perceive certain silent-era stars as old-fashioned, even those who had the talent to succeed in the sound era. And, as actress Louise Brooks suggested, there were other issues:Studio heads, now forced into unprecedented
decisions, decided to begin with the actors, the least palatable,
the most vulnerable part of movie production. It was such a
splendid opportunity, anyhow, for breaking contracts, cutting
salaries, and taming the stars.... Me, they gave the salary
treatment. I could stay on without the raise my contract called
for, or quit, [Paramount studio chief B. P.] Schulberg said, using
the questionable dodge of whether I'd be good for the talkies.
Questionable, I say, because I spoke decent English in a decent
voice and came from the theater. So without hesitation I
quit.
Lillian Gish
departed, back to the stage, and other leading figures soon left
acting entirely: Colleen
Moore, Gloria
Swanson, and Hollywood's most famous performing couple,
Douglas
Fairbanks and Mary
Pickford. Buster
Keaton was eager to explore the new medium, but when his
studio, MGM, made the changeover to sound, he was quickly stripped
of creative control. Though a number of Keaton's early talkies made
impressive profits, they were artistically dismal.
Several of the new medium's biggest attractions
came from vaudeville and the musical theater, where performers such
as Jolson, Eddie
Cantor, Jeanette
MacDonald, and the Marx
Brothers were accustomed to the demands of both dialogue and
song. James Cagney
and Joan
Blondell, who had teamed on Broadway, were brought west
together by Warner Bros. in 1930. A few actors were major stars
during both the silent and the sound eras: Richard
Barthelmess, Clive Brook,
Bebe
Daniels, Norma
Shearer, the comedy team of Stan Laurel
and Oliver
Hardy, and the incomparable Charlie
Chaplin, whose City Lights
(1931) and Modern
Times (1936) employed sound almost exclusively for music and
effects. Janet Gaynor
became a top star with the synch-sound but dialogueless Seventh
Heaven and Sunrise, as did Joan
Crawford with the technologically similar Our
Dancing Daughters (1928). Greta Garbo
was the one non–native English speaker to achieve Hollywood stardom
on either side of the great sound divide.
As talking pictures emerged, with their
prerecorded musical tracks, an increasing number of moviehouse
orchestra musicians found themselves out of work. More than just
their position as film accompanists was usurped; according to
historian Preston J. Hubbard, "During the 1920s live musical
performances at first-run theaters became an exceedingly important
aspect of the American cinema." With the coming of the talkies,
those featured performances—usually staged as preludes—were largely
eliminated as well. The
American Federation of Musicians took out newspaper
advertisements protesting the replacement of live musicians with
mechanical playing devices. One 1929 ad that appeared in the
Pittsburgh
Press features an image of a can labeled "Canned Music / Big
Noise Brand / Guaranteed to Produce No Intellectual or Emotional
Reaction Whatever" and reads in part:
Canned Music on Trial This is the case of Art vs.
Mechanical Music in theatres. The defendant stands accused in front
of the American people of attempted corruption of musical
appreciation and discouragement of musical education. Theatres in
many cities are offering synchronised mechanical music as a
substitute for Real Music. If the theatre-going public accepts this
vitiation of its entertainment program a deplorable decline in the
Art of Music is inevitable. Musical authorities know that the soul
of the Art is lost in mechanisation. It cannot be otherwise because
the quality of music is dependent on the mood of the artist, upon
the human contact, without which the essence of intellectual
stimulation and emotional rapture is lost.
By the following year, a reported 22,000 U.S.
moviehouse musicians had lost their jobs.
Commerce
In September 1926, Jack Warner, head of Warner Bros., was quoted to the effect that talking pictures would never be viable: "They fail to take into account the international language of the silent pictures, and the unconscious share of each onlooker in creating the play, the action, the plot, and the imagined dialogue for himself." Much to his company's benefit, he would be proven very wrong—between the 1927–28 and 1928–29 fiscal years, Warners' profits surged from $2 million to $14 million. Sound film, in fact, was a clear boon to all the major players in the industry. During that same twelve-month span, Paramount's profits rose by $7 million, Fox's by $3.5 million, and Loew's/MGM's by $3 million. RKO, which hadn't even existed in September 1928 and whose parent production company, FBO, was in the Hollywood minor leagues, by the end of 1929 was established as one of America's leading entertainment businesses.Even as the
Wall Street crash of October 1929 helped plunge the United
States and ultimately the global economy into depression,
the popularity of the talkies at first seemed to keep Hollywood
immune. The 1929–30 exhibition season was even better for the
motion picture industry than the previous, with ticket sales and
overall profits hitting new highs. Reality finally struck later in
1930, but sound had clearly secured Hollywood's position as one of
the most important industrial fields, both commercially and
culturally, in the United States. In 1929, film box-office receipts
comprised 16.6 percent of total spending by Americans on
recreation; by 1931, the figure had reached 21.8 percent. The
motion picture business would command similar figures for the next
decade and a half. Hollywood ruled on the larger stage, as well.
The American movie industry—already the world's most powerful—set
an export record in 1929 that, by the applied measure of total feet
of exposed film, was 27 percent higher than the year before.
Concerns that language differences would hamper U.S. film exports
turned out to be largely unfounded. In fact, the expense of sound
conversion was a major obstacle to many overseas producers,
relatively undercapitalized by Hollywood standards. The production
of multiple versions of export-bound talkies in different
languages, a common approach at first, largely ceased by mid-1931,
replaced by post-dubbing and subtitling. Despite trade restrictions
imposed in most foreign markets, by 1937, American films commanded
about 70 percent of screen time around the globe.
Just as the leading Hollywood studios gained from
sound in relation to their foreign competitors, they did the same
at home. As historian Richard B. Jewell describes, "The sound
revolution crushed many small film companies and producers who were
unable to meet the financial demands of sound conversion." The
combination of sound and the Great Depression led to a wholesale
shakeout in the business, resulting in the hierarchy of the Big
Five integrated companies (MGM, Paramount, Fox, Warners, RKO) and
the three smaller studios also called "majors" (Columbia,
Universal, United Artists) that would predominate through the
1950s. Historian Thomas Schatz describes the ancillary
effects:
[B]ecause the studios were forced to streamline
operations and rely on their own resources, their individual house
styles and corporate personalities came into much sharper focus.
Thus the watershed period from the coming of sound into the early
Depression saw the studio
system finally coalesce, with the individual studios coming to
terms with their own identities and their respective positions
within the industry.
The other country in which sound cinema had an
immediate major commercial impact was India. As one distributor of
the period said, "With the coming of the talkies, the Indian motion
picture came into its own as a definite and distinctive piece of
creation. This was achieved by music." From its earliest days,
Indian sound cinema has been defined by the musical—Alam Ara
featured seven songs; a year later, Indrasabha would feature
seventy. While the European film industries fought an endless
battle against the popularity and economic muscle of Hollywood, ten
years after the debut of Alam Ara, over 90 percent of the films
showing on Indian screens were made within the country. Most of
India's early talkies were shot in Bombay, which
remains the leading production center, but sound filmmaking soon
spread across the multilingual nation. Within just a few weeks of
Alam Aras March 1931 premiere, the Calcutta-based
Madan Pictures had released both the Hindi Shirin Farhad and the
Bengali Jamai Sasthi. The Hindustani Heer Ranjha was produced in
Lahore,
Punjab, the
following year. In 1934, Sati
Sulochana, the first Kannada talking picture to be released,
was shot in Kolhapur, Maharashtra;
Srinivasa Kalyanam became the first Tamil talkie actually shot in
Tamil
Nadu. Once the first talkie features appeared, the conversion
to full sound production happened as rapidly in India as it did in
the United States. Already by 1932, the majority of feature
productions were in sound; two years later, 164 of the 172 Indian
feature films were talking pictures. From 1934 through the present,
with the sole exception of 1952, India has been among the top three
movie-producing countries in the world every single year.
Aesthetic quality
In the first, 1930 edition of his global survey The Film Till Now, cinema pundit Paul Rotha declared, "A film in which the speech and sound effects are perfectly synchronised and coincide with their visual image on the screen is absolutely contrary to the aims of cinema. It is a degenerate and misguided attempt to destroy the real use of the film and cannot be accepted as coming within the true boundaries of the cinema." Such opinions were not rare among those who cared about cinema as an art form; Alfred Hitchcock, though he directed the first commercially successful talkie produced in Europe, held that "the silent pictures were the purest form of cinema" and scoffed at many early sound films as delivering little beside "photographs of people talking."Most latter-day film historians and aficionados
agree that silent film had reached an aesthetic peak by the late
1920s and that the early years of sound cinema delivered little
that was comparable to the best of the silents. For instance,
despite fading into relative obscurity once its era had passed,
silent cinema is represented by eleven films in Time Outs
Centenary of Cinema Top One Hundred poll, held in 1995. The
earliest sound film to place is the French L'Atalante
(1934), directed by Jean Vigo; the
earliest Hollywood sound film to qualify is Bringing
Up Baby (1938), directed by Howard
Hawks. The first year in which sound film production
predominated over silent film—not only in the United States, but
also in the West considered as a whole—was 1929; yet the years 1929
through 1931 (for that matter, 1929 through 1933) are represented
by three dialogueless pictures (Pandora's
Box [1929; often misdated 1928], Zemlya
[1930], City Lights
[1931]) and zero talkies in the Time Out poll.
Sound's short-term effect on cinematic art may be
gauged in more detail by considering those movies from the
transition period—the last years of commercial silent film
production and the first years of talking pictures—in the West that
are widely cited as masterpieces, as recorded in recent major media
polls of all-time best international movies (though some listed as
silent films, like Sunrise and City Lights, premiered with recorded
scores and sound effects, they are now customarily referred to by
historians and industry professionals as "silents"—spoken dialogue
regarded as the crucial distinguishing factor between silent and
sound dramatic cinema). From the six-year period 1927–32, eleven
silent films are broadly recognized as masterpieces and only one
talkie (TO= Time Out; VV=Village
Voice; S&S=Sight
& Sound):
Silent films
- 1927: The General (U.S.; VV 01, S&S 02), Metropolis (Germany; VV 01, S&S 02), Napoléon (France; TO 95), October (USSR; VV 01); Sunrise (U.S.; TO 95, VV 01, S&S 02)
- 1928: The Passion of Joan of Arc (France; TO 95, VV 01, S&S 02), Steamboat Bill Jr. (U.S.; VV 01)
- 1929: Man with a Movie Camera (USSR; VV 01, S&S 02), Pandora's Box (Germany; TO 95)
- 1930: Zemlya (USSR; TO 95)
- 1931: City Lights (U.S.; TO 95, VV 01, S&S 02)
- 1932: negligible silent film production
- 1927: negligible talkie production
- 1928: none
- 1929: none
- 1930: none
- 1931: M (Germany; VV 01, S&S 02)
- 1932: none
Cinematic form
"Talking film is as little needed as a singing book." Such was the blunt proclamation of critic Viktor Shklovsky, one of the leaders of the Russian formalist movement, in 1927. While some regarded sound as irreconcilable with film art, others saw it as opening a new field of creative opportunity. The following year, a group of Soviet filmmakers, including Sergei Eisenstein, proclaimed that the use of image and sound in juxtaposition, the so-called contrapuntal method, would raise the cinema to "unprecedented power and cultural height. Such a method for constructing the sound-film will not confine it to a national market, as must happen with the photographing of plays, but will give a greater possibility than ever before for the circulation throughout the world of a filmically expressed idea."On March 12,
1929, the
first feature-length talking picture made in Germany had its
premiere. The inaugural Tobis Filmkunst production, it was not a
drama, but a documentary sponsored by a shipping line: Melodie der
Welt (Melody of the World), directed by Walter
Ruttmann. This was also perhaps the first feature film anywhere
to significantly explore the artistic possibilities of joining the
motion picture with recorded sound. As described by scholar William
Moritz, the movie is "intricate, dynamic,
fast-paced...juxtapos[ing] similar cultural habits from countries
around the world, with a superb orchestral score...and many
synchronized sound effects." Composer Lou Lichtveld was among a
number of contemporary artists struck by the film: "Melodie der
Welt became the first important sound documentary, the first in
which musical and unmusical sounds were composed into a single unit
and in which image and sound are controlled by one and the same
impulse." Melodie der Welt was a direct influence on the industrial
film Philips Radio (1931), directed by Dutch avant-garde
filmmaker Joris Ivens
and scored by Lichtveld, who described its audiovisual aims:
[T]o render the half-musical impressions of
factory sounds in a complex audio world that moved from absolute
music to the purely documentary noises of nature. In this film
every intermediate stage can be found: such as the movement of the
machine interpreted by the music, the noises of the machine
dominating the musical background, the music itself is the
documentary, and those scenes where the pure sound of the machine
goes solo.
Many similar experiments were pursued by Dziga
Vertov in his 1931 Entuziazm and by Chaplin in Modern Times, a
half-decade later.
A few innovative commercial directors immediately
saw the ways in which sound could be employed as an integral part
of cinematic storytelling, beyond the obvious function of recording
speech. In Blackmail, Hitchcock manipulated the reproduction of a
character's monologue so the word "knife" would leap out from a
blurry stream of sound, reflecting the subjective impression of the
protagonist, who is desperate to conceal her involvement in a fatal
stabbing. In his first film, the Paramount Applause (1929),
Rouben
Mamoulian created the illusion of acoustic depth by varying the
volume of ambient sound in proportion to the distance of shots. At
a certain point, Mamoulian wanted the audience to hear one
character singing at the same time as another prays; according to
the director, "They said we couldn't record the two things—the song
and the prayer—on one mike and one channel. So I said to the sound
man, 'Why not use two mikes and two channels and combine the two
tracks in printing?'" Such methods would eventually become standard
procedure in popular filmmaking. One of the first commercial films
to take full advantage of the new opportunities provided by
recorded sound was Le Million,
directed by René
Clair and produced by Tobis's French division. Premiering in
Paris in April 1931 and New York a month later, the picture was
both a critical and popular success. A musical comedy with a
barebones plot, it is memorable for its formal accomplishments, in
particular, its emphatically artificial treatment of sound. As
described by scholar Donald Crafton,
Le Million never lets us forget that the acoustic
component is as much a construction as the whitewashed sets. [It]
replaced dialogue with actors singing and talking in rhyming
couplets. Clair created teasing confusions between on- and
off-screen sound. He also experimented with asynchronous audio
tricks, as in the famous scene in which a chase after a coat is
synched to the cheers of an invisible football (or rugby)
crowd.
These and similar techniques became part of the
vocabulary of the sound comedy film, though as special effects and
"color", not as the basis for the kind of comprehensive,
non-naturalistic
design achieved by Clair. Outside of the comedic field, the sort of
bold play with sound exemplified by Melodie der Welt and Le Million
would be pursued very rarely in commercial production. Hollywood,
in particular, incorporated sound into a reliable system of
genre-based moviemaking,
in which the formal possibilities of the new medium were
subordinated to the traditional goals of star affirmation and
straightforward storytelling. As accurately predicted in 1928 by
Frank Woods, secretary of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, "The talking
pictures of the future will follow the general line of treatment
heretofore developed by the silent drama.... The talking scenes
will require different handling, but the general construction of
the story will be much the same."
See also
- History of film
- Sound stage
- Film soundtrack
- :Category:Film sound production for articles concerning the development of cinematic sound recording
Notes
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External links
- "Documentary and the Coming of Sound" essay on the impact of synch-sound on nonfiction film by scholar Bill Nichols
- Edison: The Marriage of Sight and Sound brief discussion of Edison's experiments; part of the Library of Congress/Inventing Entertainment website
- Film Sound History well-organized bibliography of online articles and resources; part of the FilmSound website
- Hollywood Goes for Sound charts showing transition to sound production by Hollywood studios, 1928–1929; part of the Terra Media website
- "Hollywood Learns to Sing" essay on early film musicals by John Kenrick
- "Let's Hear It for Sound" essay on the positive effects of sound on cinema technology by Bob Allen
- "Moving Pictures That Talk" essay by audio engineer and historian Mark Ulano
- 100 Years of Cinema Loudspeakers detailed chronology by John Aldred
- Progressive Silent Film List (PSFL)/Early Sound Films comprehensive and detailed listing of first generation of sound films from around the world; part of the Silent Era website
- Recording Technology History extensive chronology of developments, including subsites, by Steven E. Schoenherr; see, in particular, Motion Picture Sound
- A Selected Bibliography of Sound and Music for Moving Pictures compiled by Miguel Mera, Royal College of Music, London; part of the School of Sound website
- The Silent Film Bookshelf links to crucial primary and secondary source documents, a number of which cover the era of transition to sound
- "The Sound of Sound" essay on theatrical sound reproduction by historian Rick Altman
- Sound Stage—The History of Motion Picture Sound informative illustrated survey; part of the American WideScreen Museum website
- The Speed of Sound chapter 1 of book by historian Scott Eyman; excerpt focuses on developments through the mid-1920s
- Vitaphone Varieties essays by amateur motion picture historian Jeff Cohen on the system and the films made with it
- "Why The Jazz Singer?" essay speculating on the basic source of the film's impact by Bob Allen (note that Allen erroneously describes The Jazz Singer as "one of the big box office hits of all time"—it was not)
- "'You Ain't Heard Nothin' Yet, Folks—Listen to This!': The Sound that Shook Hollywood" article on the transition to sound by historian Guy Flatley; part of the MovieCrazed website
Historical writings
- "The Art of Sound" May 1929 essay by filmmaker and critic René Clair
- "Asynchronism as a Principle of Sound Film" 1934 essay by filmmaker and theorist V. I. Pudovkin
- "Dialogue and Sound" essay by film historian and critic Siegfried Kracauer; first published in his book Theory of Film: The Redemption of Physical Reality (1960)
- "The Film to Come" essay by producer and composer Guido Bagier; first published in Film-Kurier, January 7, 1928
- Handbook for Projectionists technical manual covering all major U.S. systems; issued by RCA Photophone, 1930
- "Historical Development of Sound Films" chronology by sound-film pioneer E. I. Sponable; first published in Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, April/May 1947
- "Madam, Will You Talk?" article on the history of Bell Laboratories' early research into sound film, by Stanley Watkins, Western Electric engineer; first published in Bell Laboratories Record, August 1946
- "Merger of the Sound Film Industry—The Founding Agenda of Tobis" corporate manifesto first published in Film-Kurier, July 20, 1928
- "The Official Communiqué: Foundations of the Sound-Film Accord Sales Prospects for the German Electronics Industry" article first published in Film-Kurier, July 23, 1930
- Operating Instructions for Synchronous Reproducing Equipment technical manual for Western Electric theatrical sound projector system; issued by ERPI, December 1928
- "Outcome of Paris: Accord Signed/Total Interchangeability—Globe Divided into Three Patent Zones—Patent Exchange" article first published in Film-Kurier, July 22, 1930
- "The Singing Fool" review by film theorist and critic Rudolf Arnheim, ca. 1929
- "Sound-Film Confusion" 1929 essay by Rudolf Arnheim
- "Sound Here and There" essay by composer Paul Dessau; first published in Der Film, August 1, 1929
- "Sound in Films" essay by director Alberto Cavalcanti; first published in Films, November 1939
- "A Statement" polemic arguing for contrapuntal use of cinematic sound by Soviet filmmakers Sergei Eisenstein, V. I. Pudovkin, and G. V. Alexandrov; first published in Zhizn iskusstva (Life of the Art), August 5, 1928
- "Theory of the Film: Sound" 1945 essay by film theorist and critic Béla Balázs
- href="http://www.antiqueradios.com/movies.shtml">http://www.antiqueradios.com/movies.shtml "What Radio Has Meant to Talking Movies" prescient essay by Universal sound engineer Charles Feldstead; first published in Radio News, April 1931
Historical recordings
- Ben Bernie and All the Lads excerpts from ca. 1924 Phonofilm sound film; part of The Red Hot Jazz Archive website
- Dickson Experimental Sound Film discussion by restoration editor Walter Murch and clips of 1894/95 Edison sound film
- A Few Minutes With Eddie Cantor 1924 Phonofilm sound film; part of Archive.org
- President Coolidge, Taken on the White House Lawn 1924 Phonofilm sound film; part of Archive.org
- Sound-on-Film brief discussion accompanied by Quicktime version of 1930s Bell Labs cartoon describing the process, with available transcript; part of the IEEE Virtual Museum website
- Voice Trial—Kinetophone Actor Audition by Frank Lenord mp3 audio file of undated audition
- Voice Trial—Kinetophone Actor Audition by Siegfried Von Schultz mp3 audio file of undated audition
talky in Asturian: Cine sonoru
talky in German: Tonfilm
talky in Spanish: Cine sonoro
talky in French: Cinéma sonore
talky in Italian: Cinema sonoro
talky in Dutch: Geluidsfilm
talky in Japanese: トーキー
talky in Romanian: Film sonor
talky in Swedish: Ljudfilm
talky in Chinese: 有声电影
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
all jaw, candid, chatty, communicative, conversational, effusive, expansive, flip, fluent, frank, gabby, garrulous, gassy, glib, gossipy, gregarious, gushy, long-winded, loose-tongued,
loquacious, multiloquent, multiloquious, newsy, overtalkative, prolix, smooth, sociable, talkative, verbose, voluble, windy