MODULE 6 Film or Cinema
MODULE 6 Film or Cinema
MODULE 6 Film or Cinema
GE06:
Arts Appreciation
R I Z AL TE C H N O L O G I C AL U N I V E R S I TY
Cities of Mandaluyong and Pasig
Overview
Study Guide
• Overview
• Learning Outcomes
• Topic Presentation
Learning Outcomes
Topic Presentation
1. Film or Cinema
film, also called motion picture or movie, series of still photographs on film,
projected in rapid succession onto a screen by means of light. Because of the
optical phenomenon known as persistence of vision, this gives the illusion of actual,
smooth, and continuous movement.
Film is a remarkably effective medium in conveying drama and especially in the
evocation of emotion. The art of motion pictures is exceedingly complex, requiring
contributions from nearly all the other arts as well as countless technical skills (for
example, in sound recording, photography, and optics). Emerging at the end of the
19th century, this new art form became one of the most popular and influential
media of the 20th century and beyond.
As a commercial venture, offering fictional narratives to large audiences in theatres,
film was quickly recognized as perhaps the first truly mass form of entertainment.
Without losing its broad appeal, the medium also developed as a means of artistic
expression in such areas as acting, directing, screenwriting, cinematography,
costume and set design, and music.
Essential characteristics of film
In its short history, the art of motion pictures has frequently undergone changes that
seemed fundamental, such as those resulting from the introduction of sound. It
exists today in styles that differ significantly from country to country and in forms
as diverse as the documentary created by one person with a handheld camera and
the multimillion-dollar epic involving hundreds of performers and technicians.
D. Adding Color
Colour was first added to black-and-white movies through hand colouring, tinting,
toning and stencilling. By 1906, the principles of colour separation were used to
produce so-called ‘natural colour’ moving images with the British Kinemacolor
process, first presented to the public in 1909. Kinemacolor was primarily used for
documentary (or ‘actuality’) films, such as the epic With Our King and Queen
Through India (also known as The Delhi Durbar) of 1912, which ran for over 2 hours
in total. The early Technicolor processes from 1915 onwards were cumbersome and
expensive, and colour was not used more widely until the introduction of its three-
colour process in 1932. It was used for films such as Gone With the Wind and
The Wizard of Oz (both 1939) in Hollywood and A Matter of Life and Death
(1946) in the UK.
E. Adding Sound
Starting with Dalagang Bukid, early films dug into traditional theater forms for
character types , twists and turns in the plot, familiar themes and conventions in
acting. This set the trend of Philippine films based entirely on immensely popular
dramas or sarswelas . Besides providing ready materials, this device of using theater
pieces ensured an already existing market. From the komedya of the sarswela, the
typical Filipino aksyon movie was to develop. The line dividing the good and the bad
in the komedya was religion with the Christians being the good and the Moors
representing the bad. In present movies, the line that divides the two is now law or
class division. The sinakulo or the passion play was the root of the conventional
Filipino melodrama. The Virgin Mary became the “all-suffering, all-forgiving Filipino
Mother” and Jesus was the “savior of societies under threat and the redeemer of all
those who have gone wrong”. Another source of movie themes was Philippine
literature. Francisco Baltazar and Jose Rizal, through the classics for which they were
famous, have given the industry situations and character types that continue to this
day to give meat to films both great and mediocre.
Finally, by the 1930s, a few film artists and producers dared to stray from the
guidelines and commented on sociopolitical issues, using contemporary or historical
matter. Director, actor, writer and producer Julian Manansala’s film Patria Amore
(Beloved Country) was almost suppressed because of its anti-Spanish sentiments.
This earned him the honor of being dubbed the “Father of the Nationalistic Film”.
Its own share of movie audience and acclaim for local movie stars were signs
that the movie industry from 1919 to the 1930s had succeeded. Despite the
competition coming from Hollywood, the film industry thrived and flourished. When
the 1930s came to a close, it was clear that moviegoing had established itself in the
Filipino.
This period turned out to be quite beneficial to the theater industry. Live theater
began to flourish again as movie stars, directors and technicians returned to the
stage. Many found it as a way to keep them from being forgotten and at the same
time a way to earn a living.
In 1945…the film industry was already staggering to its feet. The entire nation
had gone through hell and there were many stories to tell about heroic deeds and
dastardly crimes during the 3 years of Japanese occupation. A Philippine version of
the war movie had emerged as a genre in which were recreated narratives of horror
and heroism with soldiers and guerillas as protagonists…audiences still hungry for
new movies and still fired up by the patriotism and hatred for foreign enemies did not
seem to tire of recalling their experiences of war.
Cinema: “World War II left its scars on the Filipino’s imagination and heightened his
sense of reality…”
Awards were first instituted that decade. First, the Manila Times Publishing Co.
set up the Maria Clara Awards. In 1952, the FAMAS (Filipino Academy of Movie Arts
and Sciences) Awards were handed out. More so, Filipino films started garnering
awards in international film festivals. One such honor was bestowed on Manuel
Conde’s immortal movie Genghis Khan (1952) when it was accepted for screening at
the Venice Film Festival. Other honors include awards for movies like Gerardo de
Leon’s Ifugao (1954) and Lamberto Avellana’s Anak Dalita. This established the
Philippines as a major filmmaking center in Asia. These awards also had the effect of
finally garnering for Filipino films their share of attention from fellow Filipinos.
D. Contemporary Philippine Art
Despite our completion of 100 years of cinema in the Philippines, the same problems
plague us now just as it had when film was still a relatively new art form. The phrase
“poorly made” is fitting to describe the quality of films being churned out by the film
industry year by year. There have been few exceptions to the rule. Presently, films are
primarily made for profit, lacking any qualities to redeem itself. Studies show that
Hollywood films, with its high technology and subject matter, are being preferred over
local films. It is no wonder – for films now are “too profit-oriented…[with] corrupting
morals and…dubious values…sticking with formulaic films”. Genres that have been
present for the past few decades are being recycled over and over again with the same
stories. The teen love teams of the fan movie are still present with incarnations of love
teams of yesteryears. Now instead of “Guy and Pip” are “Judy and Wowie”. The bomba
film is still present, now having grown more pornographic and taboo. The film Tatlo
(1998) comes to mind with its subject matter of threesomes. In Filipino slapstick or
komedya, Dolphy has been replaced by younger stars. But even if the films of today
have not been quite up to par, “Filipino movies…wields an influence over the national
imagination far more intense that all the others combined.”
References
Published Sources
https://www.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/objects-and-stories/very-short-history-
of-cinema
http://www.aenet.org/family/filmhistory.htm
https://www.britannica.com/art/motion-picture/Qualities-of-the-film-image