首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The History of Early Cinema A)The history of the cinema in its first thirty years is one of major and, to this day, unparalleled
The History of Early Cinema A)The history of the cinema in its first thirty years is one of major and, to this day, unparalleled
admin
2014-12-26
49
问题
The History of Early Cinema
A)The history of the cinema in its first thirty years is one of major and, to this day, unparalleled expansion and growth. Beginning as something unusual in a handful of big cities—New York, London, Paris and Berlin—the new medium quickly found its way across the world, attracting larger and larger audiences wherever it was shown and replacing other forms of entertainment as it did so.
B)As audiences grew, so did the places where films were shown, finishing up with the "great picture palaces" of the 1920s, which rivalled, and occasionally superseded, theatres and opera-houses in terms of opulence and splendour. Meanwhile, films themselves developed from being short "attractions" only a couple of minutes long, to the full-length feature that has dominated the world’ s screens up to the present day.
C)Although French, German, American and British pioneers have all been credited with the invention of cinema, the British and the Germans played a relatively small role in its world-wide exploitation. It was above all the French, followed closely by the Americans, who were the most passionate exporters of the new invention, helping to start cinema in China, Japan, Latin America and Russia. In terms of artistic development it was again the French and the Americans who took the lead, though in the years before the First World War, Italy, Denmark and Russia also played a part.
D)In the end, it was the United States that was to become, and remain, the largest single market for films. By protecting their own market and pursuing a vigorous export policy, the Americans achieved a dominant position on the world market by the start of the First World War. The centre of film-making had moved westwards, to Hollywood, and it was films from these new Hollywood studios that flooded onto the world s film markets in the years after the First World War, and have done so ever since.
E)Faced with total Hollywood domination, few film industries proved competitive.
The Italian industry, which had pioneered the feature film with spectacular films like Quo vadis(1913)and Cabiria(1914), almost collapsed. In Scandinavia, the Swedish cinema had a brief period of glory, notably with powerful epic films and comedies. Even the French cinema found itself in a difficult position. In Europe, only Germany proved industrially capable, while in the new Soviet Union and in Japan the development of the cinema took place in conditions of commercial isolation.
F)Hollywood took the lead artistically as well as industrially. Hollywood films appealed because they had better-constructed narratives, their special effects were more impressive, and the star system added a new dimension to screen acting.
G)If Hollywood did not have enough of its own resources, it had a great deal of money to buy up artists and technical innovations from Europe to ensure its continued dominance over present or future competition.
H)The rest of the world survived partly by learning from Hollywood and partly because audiences continued to exist for a product which corresponded to needs which Hollywood could not supply. As well as popular audiences, there were also increasing audiences for films which were artistically more adventurous or which dealt with the issues in the outer world.
I)None of this would have happened without technology, and cinema is in fact unique as an art form. In the early years, this art form was quite primitive, similar to the original French idea of using a lantern and slides back in the seventeenth century. Early cinema programmes were a mixture of items, combining comic sketches, free-standing narratives, serial episodes and the occasional trick or animated film.
J)With the arrival of the feature-length narrative as the main attraction, other types of films became less important. The making of cartoons became a separate branch of film-making, generally practised outside the major studios, and the same was true of serials. Together with newsreels, they tended to be shown as short items in a programme which led to the feature.
K)From early cinema, it was only American slapstick comedy that successfully developed in both short and feature format. However, during this "Silent Film" era, animation, comedy, serials and dramatic features continued to thrive, along with factual films or documentaries, which acquired an increasing distinctiveness as the period progressed.
L)It was also at this time that the avant-garde film first achieved commercial success, this time thanks almost exclusively to the French and the occasional German film.
M)Of the countries which developed and maintained distinctive national cinemas in the silent period, the most important were France, Germany and the Soviet Union. Of these, the French displayed the most continuity, in spite of the war and post-war economic uncertainties. The German cinema, relatively insignificant in the pre-war years, exploded on to the world scene after 1919. Yet even they were both overshadowed by the Soviets after the 1917 Revolution. They turned their back on the past, leaving the style of the pre-war Russian cinema to the emigres who fled westwards to escape the Revolution.
N)The other countries whose cinemas changed dramatically are: Britain, which had an interesting but undistinguished history in the silent period; Italy, which had a brief moment of international fame just before the war; the Scandinavian countries, particularly Denmark, which played a role in the development of silent cinema quite out of proportion to their small population; and Japan, where a cinema developed based primarily on traditional theatrical and, to a lesser extent, other art forms and only gradually adapted to western influence.
In the 1920s, cinema was an entertainment as favorable as theatres and opera-houses.
选项
答案
B
解析
本题意为20世纪20年代时,电影和歌剧、戏剧一样是受到欢迎的娱乐方式。题干中的1920s为关键词,对应到文章B段As audiences grew,so did the placeswhere films were shown,finishing up with the“great picture palaces”of the 1920s,which rivalled,and occasionally superseded,theatres and opera-houses in terms ofopulence and splendour.“当观众群越来越大的时候,放映电影的地点也日益增多.也创造了20世纪20年代的‘大照片宫殿’时期。在此期间,电影的魅力可与剧院和歌剧院相媲美,有时甚至要更胜一筹。”题干中的as favourable as是对原文rivalled的同义替换。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/D8OFFFFM
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Logicalmind.B、Writingability.C、Knowledgeonhistory.D、Communicatingability.A推断题。对话中男士(Mr.Johnson)提到,他了解到做计算机方面的工作需要的是逻辑
A、Theysaiditbroketherecordinhistory.B、Theysaiditwasagreatwonder.C、Theysaidhardlyanythingaboutit.D、Theysaid
A、Toguaranteethathehastheabilitytopaytherent.B、Toconfirmhehasnopoorcredithistory.C、Toensurehecancoverthe
A、Heneedstotakeabreakfromstudy.B、Hehasahistoryexaminationtonight.C、Hedoesn’tlikegoingoutintherain.D、Hecan
A、Whatisso-calledThanksgivingDay.B、HowtocelebrateThanksgivingDay.C、TheexacttimeofThanksgivingDay.D、Thehistoryo
A、Theaverageageofthesubjectswas49inthefirststudy.B、Thesubjects’familyhistorywasinvestigatedinthefirststudy.
A、She’slookingforwardtoherhistoryclass.B、She’ssurprisedhowtoughherreadingassignmentis.C、Shethinksthebookisto
A、Tostudythehistoryofthecity.B、Toseeasmuchofthecityasshecan.C、Todosomebusiness.D、TovisittheCastleanddo
A、Hefindshistorybooksdifficulttounderstand.B、Hehastoreadalotofhistorybooks.C、Hedoesn’tlikethehistorycourse.
随机试题
我国四级标准中最基础和最重要的是
X线体层摄影目前已基本被以下哪项检查所取代
1个治疗量血小板的输注时间一般应控制在()
肺炎出现下列症状提示有中毒型肺炎可能的是
空置虽减少收入,但不是损失。()
股权类期货合约的基础资产有()。
企业年金是指在政府强制实施的公共养老金或国家养老金之外,企业在国家政策的指导下,()的一种补充性养老保障制度。
下列关于集体合同的说法正确的有()。
材料:教师在完成“企业与劳动者”课堂教学后,组织学生进行了一场主题为“‘分配工作’还是‘自谋职业’”的实践探究活动。下面是该活动的设计方案片段。问题:上述方案是如何体现思想政治课程实施中强调实践性这一要求的。
假设二维随机变量(X,Y)在矩形区域G={(x,y)|0≤x≤2,0≤y≤1}上服从均匀分布,记(Ⅰ)求U和V的联合分布;(Ⅱ)求U和V的相关系数ρ。
最新回复
(
0
)