
It’s more than a show
Tisdale - Friday, September 7, 2012
Though there were various early forms of movies, the industry that developed with production, distribution and presentation in theatres for a paying public, really began during World War One and then, took off in the twenties. So as we look at this form of entertainment and story telling, it really is about a hundred years old. The move to sound in the late twenties and then colour, which was around almost from the start, but it was not until the early sixties that almost all movies were in colour. Both sound and colour were linked with technological development, colour was an issue of economics.

Mother had her favourite kinds of movies, musicals and romance pictures. Father like just about everything so there were compromises about which show we would go to and afterward, there were sometimes complaints. Mother was not a fan of westerns and the reason for that was that so many of the westerns had no women in the cast, or if they were, they played parts that really did not contribute to the story. Violent movies were always a bit offensive to us all, especially the prison movies, which seemed to be a genre in the forties and fifties.

When I was about ten or eleven, mother was very sick and dad took me with him to "A streetcar named desire,” it was an adult movie and father was embarrassed for having taken me.. After the movie, he asked me if I understood it and I explained to him that of course I understood it, in fact, I really like it. You see, he saw an adult movie with all the sexual content that was apart of that story, I saw a fascinating story of a woman, "Blanche,” who was both a bit crazy and seriously affected by alcohol.
Though we all have come to accept the structure of motion pictures, the star system, the plot, the setting, the character development, the special effects and how the vision of a producer and director can create an event that the viewer experiences. All that seems important, but the real connection we have with a motion picture, are the people who play the parts and make words on paper, come to life in action and emotion, before our very eyes.

Let us consider the wonder of taking a role and performing as only the individual and that individual alone, can. Retaining themselves, yet making a fictional character come to life, is in my opinion, a much higher form of art than transformation. Here are some of those people who were completely themselves but created motion picture experiences that all who saw them perform were affected emotionally and intellectually.

The English actor Charles Laughton preferred working before a live audience, where he spent most of his career, but his movies were master works. His voice was so distinctive and his presence on screen made him the only thing you paid attention to, in essence, he stole every scene. His 1939 creation of the Hunchback of Notre Dame is the sort of thing that one never forgets. He was a monster, the bad guy in the movie, but yet every witness to that performance was with him sobbing at the end. His life ended in 1962.
Also, primarily a stage actor, who did many movies, Alastair Sim became those characters and you knew it the moment he appeared on screen. He actually was a drama lecturer in Scotland for five years. In his remarkable career it was his Scrooge that all other Scrooges can never hope to come even close to bringing Dickens to life on screen as he had.

These and hundreds of others, are part of the lives of the movie goers who were touched by their performances. They played parts and were themselves, the viewer comes to know them for their work and the little bit of themselves they put into those images and sounds. That was the case with Michael Clarke Duncan who died on Monday of this week at age 54. In his first role with Bruce Willis, this former ditch digger, body guard and bouncer was trying to act. Willis told him to be himself, the guy they hired for the part. He took the advice and three years later he was nominated for an academy award for the moving performance in the Tom Hanks movie "The Green Mile." This past winter, he warmed the emotions of television viewers in the series "The Finder" where he essentially played himself, for indeed, that was all that was needed from he, or any other performer.

Now here is the thing that we all need to face, after a hundred years is this form of communication about to vanish?
Have you ever watched a movie on your computer, a personal DVD player, an iPod or iPad. I have never made it through a show, because it just seems to empty. The shared reaction, be it in your living room with your big screen TV, or in a theatre, is dependent upon it being a shared experience. You can't get the experience by yourself, we are social beings and we thrive on things we do together.
When I told you about the choices we had in the 1950s, to go to different towns to see a movie, that is already no longer something that most people in Saskatchewan, or other parts of rural North American can do. Most of our local theatres, even in the cities, are no longer in existence. This past weekend Tisdale's Falcon Theatre did not have a movie to show because of availability. That is what is going to happen very very quickly. The production studios are fully switching over to digital distribution, just as only a hand full of movies are made each year now on actual film, by the end of the coming year, all theatres will have to have video projection equipment in order to stay in business.

The whole industry is undergoing massive changes. Productions have been shifting from distributing their product in theatres to going directly to DVD. Mel Gibson did such a movie this year called "Get the Gringo" but children's movies have been coming out that way for several years. Television and even movies are being made specifically to be streamed over the internet, so-call web broadcast productions. The fracturing of the motion picture industry is well on its way, to following the path of the music industry, which is seeing the individual performer competing directly with the music companies to distribute their products. Lady Gaga's next album will be out in the spring, but it will be available as a CD, but the plan is to sell the project as an iPad interactive "app."
It is not my job to sweeten this story with a fairy tale ending, but rather just to tell you what appears to be happening and to tell you, that it concerns me. All those fictional characters of the future have as much to tell us, as the hundred years of their stories and feelings in the past.
