The History of Film

  • The Phenakistoscope

    The Phenakistoscope
    Invented in 1832 by Joseph Plateau. This was a spinning disc that gave the illusion of movement when seen in a mirror.
  • The Zoetrope

    The Zoetrope
    a drum with a series of pictures on the inner surface. When spun, it gives the illusion of movement.
  • The Daguerreotype

    The Daguerreotype
    The first commercially succesful photographic process. Each daguerreotype is a unique image etched onto a copper plate.
  • The Chronophotographic Gun

    The Chronophotographic Gun
    Invented by Etienne-Jules Marey to study the movement of birds in flight. it averaged 12 photos per second which were each imprinted on a rotating glass plate.
  • The Use of Celluloid Film

    The Use of Celluloid Film
    Hannibal Goodwin devloped the idea to use celluloid as a base for photography in 1887. Celluloid roll film begins manufaturing two years later. A crucial event in the developement of cinematography.
  • The Kinetoscope

    The Kinetoscope
    Invented by Thomas Edison and William Dickson in 1891. A strip of film is passed between a light and a lense white the viewer watches through a peephole. Marketed for sale in 1894 at a going rate of $250 to $300.
  • The Vitascope

    The Vitascope
    Patented and adopted by Thomas Edison to project films from the kinetoscope. Leads to the first Nickleodeon Theatre.
  • The Cinematograph

    The Cinematograph
    Used as both a camera and a projector, the cinematograph was the first motion picture apparatus. Based off of Edison's kinetoscope, the cinematograph ran at 16 frams per second.
  • Le Voyage dans la lune (A Trip to the Moon)

    Le Voyage dans la lune (A Trip to the Moon)
    By French filmmaker Georges Melies. First film to achieve international distribution. Helped establish fiction film as cinema's main product.
  • The Great Train Robbery

    The Great Train Robbery
    Edwin S. Porter. The industry's first major box-office success.
  • Nickelodeons

    Nickelodeons
    Harry Davis and John Harris open a theatre and coin the term "Nickelodeon" because admission cost was five cents.
  • Motion Picture Patents Company

    Motion Picture Patents Company
    The 16 most significant motion-picture patents enter into a contract with The Eastman Kodak Company to maintain dominance in the rapidly growing film industry.
  • Motion Picture Attendance on the Rise

    Motion Picture Attendance on the Rise
    Motion picture attendance rises to 26 million people a week in the United States becoming a monopoly.
  • Multiple-Reel Films

    Multiple-Reel Films
    Exhibitors learn that they can raise admission prices for longer films. Multi-reel films were the base of the motion pictures we see today.
  • Hollywood

    Hollywood
    By 1915, around 15,000 people were employed by the motion picture industry in Hollywood. This same year, investment in motion pictures exceeded $500 million.