Science Projects And Inventions

Film Camera/Projector

"If my films make even one more person feel miserable, I'll feel I've done my job."
Woody Alien, movie director
In just over 100 years, "moving pictures" have evolved from peep-show parlors into a vast, multibillion dollar industry that spans the globe.
Today's movie industry has its roots in numerous nineteenth-century innovations. Thomas Edison sought to develop a device"... which does for the eye what the phonograph does for the ear." Attempts to duplicate the cylinder format of Edison's phonograph proved a dead-end, but Edison's "assistant," W. K. L Dickson, eventually developed the Kinetoscope for viewing pictures in a "peep-show" format, and the Kinetograph camera with which to create footage. The viewing method of this equipment, one person at a time, had obvious limitations,
It was the Lu mi ere brothers—Auguste (1862-1954) and Louis (1864-1948)—who created the first practical film camera, projector, the Cinematograph. Despite the fact that it incorporated both projection and filming functions in one (and was a printer too), it was much smaller than Edison's large, bulky Kinetograph. The machine also had the massive advantage of projecting pictures that many people could view at once. It is this similarity to modern projectors that establishes it as the first proper film camera, projector.
The first public showing, on December 28, 1895, featured ten short films including the Lumiere's first film Workers Leaving the Lumiere Factory. Each film was hand-cranked through a projector and lasted for approximately forty-six seconds. Film historians generally consider this historic 'screening at the Grand Cafe in Paris to mark the birth of cinema as a commercial medium. 


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