The earliest days of film are full of self-taught
artists, doing lots of experimentation, and
stumbling across many a happy accident. And some sad accidents, probably.
Nobody really knew what they were doing.
They were making it up as they went, and audiences
went along for the ride.
At first, people was impressed by the sheer
technical marvel of moving pictures.
But thanks to Georges Méliès’ passion
for to dazzling illusions and tricky editing,
film began to emerge as a new medium for stories.
As filmmakers started to experiment with narrative
film, they began to establish a language through
different editing techniques and camera movements.
And with any language comes rules – things
like grammar, syntax, and punctuation – which
can help artists and storytellers communicate
their ideas in clear and interesting ways.
But before rules can be followed, or broken,
or mastered, they have to be discovered by someone.
And for film, that someone was Edwin S. Porter. And for Eagle Punching, that's me.
[Opening Titles Play]
Georges Méliès was a stage magician whose whole approach to entertainment
was to wow an audience with illusion, extravagance, and surprise.
So it makes sense that his films, as impressive
and influential as they were, operated as
performative spectacles.
This type of filmmaking is more interested
in presentation than representation.
We’re supposed to sit back in slack-jawed
amazement at the mysterious feats occurring
before us, instead of empathizing with characters
or “finding ourselves” on screen.
The film scholar Tim Gunning calls this the
“Cinema of Attractions,” and offers it
as a way to think about the entire first decade
of film – where the novelty itself of film
is enough to keep people buying tickets.
You’ve probably experienced this concept
at some point: a new technology comes out,
and at first we’re all just marveling at
what it can do.
Like, posting shaky vertical videos of your
cat online for everybody to see.
Or wandering around outside throwing virtual
Pokéballs at virtual Pokémon. Speaking of... GOT 'EM!
But eventually, the newness wears off, and
people want something more.
I havn't played Angry Birds in many months.
That’s what was happening in 1903, as mainstream
films started to focus more on narratives
designed to engage the viewer, rather than
simply astonish them.
And that’s exactly when Edwin S. Porter
entered the filmmaking scene.
Born in 1870, Porter worked as a sign painter,
telegraph operator, and minor inventor, before
becoming a touring projectionist.
He travelled from South America to Canada
exhibiting films for a device called the Projectorscope
– one of Edison’s competitors.
Part of Porter’s job was to assemble the
various actualités and short films into longer
feature programs.
He picked the order, created transitions between
the films, and arranged for any musical or
spoken accompaniment.
Now, this feels like a good place to make
a point about silent films.
Because there was no such thing!
WHAT!?!?!
I mean, even in the Golden Age of Silent Film,
movies were almost never shown in actual silence.
We call them “silent films” because the
technology to record synchronous sound hadn’t
really been invented yet.
But that doesn’t mean that folks gathered
in theaters, church basements, or barns and
watched films in pin-drop silence.
Larger venues employed full orchestras, bands,
or organists to accompany their films.
Smaller spaces might have had a piano player
or a phonograph.
Or a guy who went, "la la laaaa"... probably not that though.
Some films were even released with scripts
to be performed by actors, or voice-over narration
to be read along with the images.
So in 1899, after his stint as a travelling
exhibitor of not-so-silent films, Porter returned
to New York.
He eventually became the head of production
at one of Edison’s film studios, responsible
for setting the stories, operating the camera,
directing the actors, and assembling the final films.
Wore a lot of hats, that guy.
This is where his time as a touring projectionist
came in handy.
Not only did he have a good idea what kinds
of stories and techniques played well in front
of an audience, but he’d also spent a lot
of time cutting together different pieces of film.
In doing this rough kind of “editing,”
he stumbled upon a bunch of techniques and
effects he would put to use in his own multi-shot
films.The most influential of these is called
parallel action or cross-cutting.
It’s an editing technique so powerful, and
which occurs in so many films and TV shows
today, that you probably don’t even
think about it.
Basically, parallel action is the idea that
a film can cut back and forth between two
or more events that are happening simultaneously
within the world of a film.
Even though you’re seeing these scenes in
sequential order, your brain understands that
they’re actually happening at the same time.
Like, imagine two parallel lines.
Each one represents the timeline of an event,
and both events are occurring at the exact same time.
Now, imagine slicing those two lines up, and
stitching a few alternating pieces together
into a single new line.
If I were to show you that final assembly
of film, your brain would intuitively understand
that these events were happening at the same
time.
Cool, right?
The first film that we know utilized parallel
action successfully was Edwin S. Porter’s
Life of an American Fireman, made in 1902
and inspired by Méliès’ A Trip to the Moon.
The story follows – spoiler alert – an
American fireman, who rescues his wife from
a burning building.
The film begins with a napping fireman dreaming
about his wife and child going to bed at home.
I love napping.
After a fire alarm is pulled, and the firemen
race to the house on fire, we cut inside the
building to see the wife and child carried
out of their smoke-filled bedroom.
Then, the film cuts back outside the building,
and we watch the same firemen enter the same
building and emerge once again with the wife
and the child.
Even though this innovation seems small, it
contributed to film grammar in ways we still
see to this day, and affected what filmmakers
thought was possible as they constructed their
stories for the screen.
Now, in 1903, Porter released his most successful
film: The Great Train Robbery.
Some scholars argue that The Great Train Robbery
doesn’t use parallel action in the same
way that The Life of an American Fireman did.
But I think a close reading of the film shows
a sophisticated understanding of how a filmmaker
can manipulate time by cutting between simultaneous
scenes.
In the film, a railroad engineer is knocked
out and tied up by a group of bandits bent
on hijacking a train.
The heist plays out in a traditional, linear
fashion: Each scene is one uninterrupted shot
after another, including a really long shot
of the thieves lining up the passengers and
stealing their stuff.
Then, a remarkable thing happens... and I'm gonna remark on it.
Once the heist is complete, the film cuts
back to the railroad office, as a young girl
discovers the unconscious engineer, revives
him, and sets him free.
We then cut to a group of law enforcement
officers at a dance, where the engineer busts
in and alerts them to the heist.
And finally, we cut to the criminals riding
horses through the woods, being chased by
the law enforcement officers.
At this moment, the two time streams that
were happening simultaneously – the railroad
engineer’s and the criminals’ – suddenly
merge.
And the rest of the film plays out in another
linear scene in which the offers gun down
the criminals, dispensing the kind of frontier
justice that would make Clint Eastwood proud.
Contemporary films use cross-cutting all the
time.
Take the final sequence from The Godfather,
for example.
70s but, contemporary.
In it, director Francis Ford Coppola cuts
back and forth between the baptism of Michael
Corleone’s godson and the slaughter of his
enemies – church to bloodbath and back again. Fun.
This kind of parallel action not only shows
us events that are happening simultaneously,
but also connects them thematically and symbolically.
Michael is consolidating his power as head
of a major crime family through both violent
and peaceful means, in ceremonies both sacred
and profane, juxtaposing life and death.
Not every use of parallel action is as profound
as that, though.
Comic book blockbusters like The Dark Knight
or Captain America: The Winter Soldier cross-cut
during action sequences to heighten tension,
while thrillers like The Fugitive and The
Silence of the Lambs juxtapose the pursuer
and the pursued.
And every romantic comedy that ends with a
race to the airport cuts back and forth between
the would-be sweethearts, daring us to consider
the possibility that they won’t live happily
ever after.
All of that starts with Edwin S. Porter and
his experiments with parallel action.
Porter was responsible for a few other innovations
in The Great Train Robbery that made it one
of the most influential movies of the early
silent era.
Before The Great Train Robbery, most films
consisted of static shots.
The camera was set up, someone turned the
crank, and the scene played out before the lens.
Porter was among the first filmmakers to begin
moving the camera during the shot.
And that’s how we got the pan and the tilt.
A pan occurs when the camera is turned left
or right on a horizontal axis from a fixed
point, like the top of a tripod.
And a tilt happens when the camera is moved
up or down on a vertical axis from a fixed point.
Porter used both in The Great Train Robbery,
including one remarkable pan as the escaping
criminals hop over a stream and scurry through
the trees.
The camera pans left with them to discover…
horses: their means of escape!
The film and the filmmaker are playing a trick
on us.
They know more than we do, and Porter is revealing
narrative information in a camera move, instead
of just showing us everything!
He’s using the camera to tell the story. Amazing!
Here’s another chance to put yourself in
the shoes of an audience member: one who’s
only seen films where the camera never moved,
and all the story information was right there
in the shot.
Then imagine seeing a film where that information
was withheld and given to you piece by piece,
keeping you on your toes.
You’re suddenly watching an exponentially
more sophisticated film.
Lucky you.
Not to mention, the last shot of The Great
Train Robbery was unique in its own right.
It’s a medium close-up of one of the bandits,
much closer than any shot we’ve seen so
far – from about navel up – and he’s
looking directly at us.
He raises his pistol, aims at the camera – at
us! – and fires.
The size, scale, and direct gaze of this shot
was startling at the time, and influential
enough that Martin Scorsese stole it for a
key moment in Goodfellas.
And if it’s good enough for Marty, it must
be pretty good. Marty, if you're watching? Can I call you Marty?
Let me know in the comments.
No single filmmaker did as much to shape narrative
film grammar in the first decade of motion
pictures as Edwin S. Porter.
He uncovered a series of tools and techniques
– the first rules of narrative film language
– that subsequent directors would use, modify,
and expand upon for decades to come.
Prior to The Life of an American Fireman and
The Great Train Robbery, films were almost
all constructed in a strictly linear fashion
– complete scene followed by complete scene. BORING!
But after Porter, filmmakers became more adept
at telling stories, using shots and cuts to
engage the audience and keep them coming back
for more.
And in many ways, film has never looked back.
Today we learned about Edwin S. Porter, whose
experiments with editing helped establish
the language of narrative film, and expanded
the horizons of what filmmakers thought was possible.
We introduced the idea of cross-cutting, and
how our brains can understand when a film
cuts between simultaneous events.
Then, we discussed how Porter innovated even
more storytelling tools, like moving the camera
in pans and tilts.
And now that the foundation has been laid,
next time, we’ll talk about even more developments
in film language and the emergence of the
feature film.
Crash Course Film History is produced in association
with PBS Digital Studios.
You can head over to their channel to check
out a playlist of their latest amazing shows,
like PBS Space Time, The Good Stuff, and Blank
on Blank.
This episode of Crash Course was filmed in
the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio
with the help of these nice train robbers and our
amazing graphics team, is Thought Cafe.
