THE CINEMA AS A RIVAL OF THE STAGE
Outline:
1.
The modern cinema a very popular form of
entertainment.
2.
The cost and trouble of producing a big
film.
3.
The cinema is now driving the regular
theatre out.
4.
Some reasons for this.
The cinema is now very popular form of entertainment
and even the smallest town has no its “picture-house”. In the old days (not so
old, either) of the silent films, it did not seem at all likely that the cinema
would be a serious rival of the theatre; but the modern “talkies”, with their
splendid moving-pictures, their music, their light effects, and their good
reproduction of the human voice, have been brought to such a pitch of
perfection that they have become far more popular than the regular theatres.
The production of these films has now become a huge
and lucrative business; and a great film costs thousands of pounds to produce. Take
a Shakespearian play, or a story representing scenes in Africa, Pakistan, or
the Wild West of America. A company of actors and actresses has to be
maintained to act the part; the whole company may have to go to a foreign
country, like Africa, so that they can play the piece in the actual
surroundings. Weeks of practices and rehearsals have to be gone through before
the piece in perfect. And then the whole has to be photographed as it is
played, and the film developed. Cinema acting has now become a distinct
profession; and film “stars” draw princely salaries.
It would, perhaps, be too much to say that the
cinema has killed the theatre. There are still plenty of theatres running, and
plenty of plays produced. But there is no doubt that the cinema has dealt the
theatre a serious blow. For hundreds who go to theatres to see play, thousand
attend the picture-houses nightly to see “talky” films. In a medium-sized town
there may be one theatre as against a dozen cinemas. Certainly the working
classes prefer the moving-pictures, and leave the orthodox theatres to the
highbrows.
How can we account for this? Well, though a film
costs so much to produce, it can, if it takes on, bring in such large profits to
the producers that they can afford to show it to the public in the various
picture-houses at very cheap admission charges. Then the cinema has absorbed
most of the best actors and actresses; and so anybody can see a play acted by
the best talent in a film for a small charge, whereas it would be only very
rarely he could see the same excellence of acting on the stage.
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