<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
          Make me your Homepage
          left corner left corner
          China Daily Website

          Cinema returns to the tiny screen

          Updated: 2012-09-17 09:38
          By Randall Stross (The New York Times)
          Cinema returns to the tiny screen

          Before big screens made cinema a social and sensual event, movies were viewed through tiny holes in Kinetoscopes. National Park Service

          Early in the history of the Big Screen, back to the 1890s, you'll find no screen at all.

          The earliest motion-picture viewing was a solitary experience. One looked through a peephole in a Kinetoscope, a waist-high cabinet in which a light illuminated the frames of a continuous film loop. A magnifying lens was attached to the peephole, but the images remained tiny.

          When projection arrived, movie images could be made larger than life, on a big screen accompanied by big sound. Taking in a movie became not just an immersive experience, but also a social one, with audience members sitting in the dark together, laughing and crying.

          Today, movie watching is, again, solitary, involving small images on a laptop, a tablet and, tinier still, a cellphone. The convenience comes at a price: the immersive cinematic experience has been lost.

          The newest titles are available through Apple or Google for inexpensive rental on the small screen. (Apple made movie rentals available for phones in 2008, and Netflix, the leader in streaming older movie titles, introduced a smartphone app in 2010). Cellphone owners can rent "Hugo," the 2012 Academy Award winner for cinematography, for $3.99 and watch it on a screen whose size is not much larger than the image seen through the Kinetoscope's peephole.

          When an online movie is viewed at home on a giant flat screen and heard through an expensive sound system, the sensory experience surely exceeds what might be had at a rundown multiplex. But movies viewed on mobile devices aren't going to give the brain's sensorium much stimulation.

          "It's a sensual experience when you go to a theater, if there's sharp projection and six-track sound," says John Belton, a professor of English and film at Rutgers University in New Jersey. "That is a very different experience than watching on an iPad."

          In an early movie palace that might hold 5,000 people, a screen might have been only 4.5 meters wide. But the images became larger around the time that sound arrived in the 1930s.

          Then, in the 1950s, as Hollywood found itself competing with television, it used special lenses to create movies for screens of expanded width, as wide as 19.5 meters. This was, Professor Belton says, part of Hollywood's campaign "to show the limitations of television." Later, Hollywood reversed course and began selling to TV, though that meant cropping its pictures so they would fit on a small screen.

          The most glorious attempt to fully engage the theater spectator's senses was Cinerama, introduced in 1952. Filmed with three cameras outfitted with wide-angle lenses, it used three wide screens, put together in a sumptuous near-semicircle of 146 degrees.

          Cinema returns to the tiny screen

          "This gives you a 'first-person' experience," says Thomas Hauerslev, editor of the Web site In70mm. "You see what you'd see if you were sitting where the camera is." He says IMAX "is not a first-person experience - it's just big."

          Each frame in Cinerama is 50 percent taller than a regular frame, providing more detail. This makes the cinematic illusion "extremely realistic," Mr. Hauerslev says.

          Cinerama was costly, and its commercial life was short. It was used only for travelogues, except in 1962, when "How the West Was Won" and "The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm" were released.

          The Cinerama name was transferred to a smaller format, and then it, too, was abandoned.

          Cinerama was the high point in sensory immersion; yesterday's Kinetoscopes and today's smartphone screens, the low points.

          "If you look at the great Hollywood classics in the 1930s and 1940s, you'll see many wide master shots and sparing use of close-ups," says John Bailey, a cinematographer. "But with the advent of TV and now also with smaller screens, we're seeing more close-ups."

          Movie producers will probably keep adapting, changing movies themselves so that they look better on a tiny screen.

          "You can say it's 'watching a movie,'" says Professor Belton of viewing on mobile devices. "But it's not cinema."

          The New York Times

           
           
          ...
          ...
          主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲自偷自偷在线成人网站传媒| 成人精品网一区二区三区| 国产极品精品自在线不卡| 亚洲爽爆av一区二区| 草草线在成年免费视频2| 在线亚洲+欧美+日本专区| 国产成人精品1024免费下载| 国产中文字幕在线一区| 欲色欲色天天天www| 国产精品天堂avav在线| 国产精品一码在线播放| mm1313亚洲国产精品| 国产视频一区二区三区麻豆| 欧洲熟妇熟女久久精品综合| 国产精品国产三级国AV| 日韩av无码久久精品免费| 在线观看人成视频免费| 亚洲人成网网址在线看| 亚洲粉嫩av一区二区黑人| 无遮挡高潮国产免费观看| 亚洲qingse中文字幕久久| 精品无码视频在线观看| 久久99日本免费国产精品| 欧美高清精品一区二区| 亚洲第一福利视频| 日本中文字幕一区二区三| 国产精品免费中文字幕| 国产极品精品自在线不卡| 午夜福利影院不卡影院| 国模粉嫩小泬视频在线观看| 亚洲AV高清一区二区三区尤物| 日韩无套无码精品| 亚洲av区一区二区三区| 少妇人妻偷人精品免费| 玩弄放荡人妻少妇系列| 亚洲理论在线A中文字幕| 精品婷婷色一区二区三区| 熟妇人妻久久春色视频网| 女主播扒开屁股给粉丝看尿口| av午夜福利一片免费看久久| 激情五月开心综合亚洲|