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The Classical Hollywood Cinema
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19 February 1987
PERFORMING ARTS / Film / General, HISTORY / United States / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General
David Bordwell is Professor of Film at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and head of the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research.
Janet Staiger is Assistant Professor of Cinema Studies at New York University.
Kristin Thompson is Honorary Fellow at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Part 1. The classical Hollywood style, 1917-60 by David Bordwell
An excessively obvious cinema
Story causality and motivation
The Hollywood mode of production to 1930, by Janet Staiger
Classical narration
The formulation of the classical style, 1909-28, by Kristin Thompson
Time in the classical film
Film style and technology to 1930
Space in the classical film
The Hollywood mode of production, 1930-60, by Janet Staiger
Shot and scene
Film style and technology, 1930-60, by David Bordwell
The bounds of difference
Historical implications of the classical Hollywood cinema, by David Bordwell and Janet Staiger
The Hollywood mode of production: its conditions of exercise
Standardization and differentiation: The reinforcement and dispersion of Hollywood's practices
The director system: management in the first years
The director-unity system: management of multiple-unit companies after 1909
The central producer system: centralized management after 1914
The division and order of production: the subdivision of the work from the first years through the 1920s
From primitive to classical
The formulation of the classical narrative
The continuity system
Classical narrative space and the spectator's attention
The stability of the classical approach after 1917
Technology, style and mode of production, by David Bordwell and Janet Staiger
Initial standardization of the basic technology, by Kristin Thompson
Major technological changes of the 1920s, by Kristin Thompson
The Mazda tests of 1928
The introduction of sound, by David Bordwell
The labor-force, financing and the mode of production
The producer-unit system: management by specialization after 1931
The package-unit system: unit management after 1955
Deep-focus cinematography
Technicolor
Widescreen processes and stereophonic sound
Since 1960: the persistence of a mode of film practice
Alternative modes of film practice