Read The Oxford History of World Cinema Online
Authors: Geoffrey Nowell-Smith
early as 1914 industrialists such as Krupp's Alfred Hugenberg realized the positive
advantages to be gained by film as a medium of political influence. Hugenberg, later to
control Universum-Film AG (Ufa), formed the Deutsche Lichtbild Gesellschaft,
effectively provoking competing representatives from the electrical and chemical
industries to forge an alliance with the government. In a grand plan secretly orchestrated
by General Ludendorff and partially financed by the government, existing companies
such as Messter, Union, and Nordisk were purchased and reorganized in 1917 into Ufa,
which overnight became Germany's most important producer, distributor, and exhibitor of
films. Government and industrial capital, the new markets provided by territorial conquest
and Nordisk's rights, and an acute awareness of film's propaganda potential, all in a
virtually competition-free environment, led to continued theatre construction and
increased film production until the end of the war.
The experience of the Russian film industry until the government's collapse in 1917
appeared somewhat closer to the German than the Allied model. With a pre-war
dependence on imports for up to 90 per cent of its films, war-related transportation
problems, and declining production levels among its French, British, and Italian trading
partners, the Russian industry had to fend for itself. Toeplitz ( 1987) claims that by 1916,
despite difficult economic conditions, domestic production levels reached some 500 films.
Under these circumstances, the Russian market, characterized by among other things its
demands for films with tragic endings and a high degree of formal stasis, helped to
develop a distinctly national cinema as evident in the work of Yevgeny Bauer and Yakov
Protazanov. From late 1917 onwards, however, the Bolshevik revolution and the civil war
which followed it, together with extreme privation in many parts of the nation,
temporarily halted the progress of the film industry.
The war, regardless of its impact on the various national cinemas, encouraged a series of
common developments. Film played an explicit role in shaping public sentiments towards
the conflict and in informing the public of the war's progress. From Chaplin's The Bond
( 1918) or Griffith's Hearts of the World ( 1918) to
The Universal Animated Weekly
or
Annales de guerre
, film served the interests of the State, and in so doing demonstrated its
'good citizenship'. Such demonstrations of civic responsibility helped to placate the film
industry's lingering enemies from the pre-war era -- concerned clergy, teachers, and
citizens who perceived motion pictures as a threat to established cultural values -- and to
reassure those progressive reformers who held high hopes for film as a medium with
uplifting potentials. National governments and the military, too, took an active role in the
production and often regulation of film. Germany's BUFA (Bild- und Film Amt), the
USA's Committee on Public Information, Britain's Imperial War Office, and France's
Service
Photographique et Cinématographique de l'Armée
variously controlled
photographic access to the front, produced military and medical training films, and
commissioned propaganda films for the public. And, legitimizing strategies aside, tent
cinemas on the front and warm theatres in European cities short of fuel drew new
audiences to the motion picture. In this regard, the unusually high levels of organization
and support provided by the German government to BUFA and Ufa were matched by its
efforts on the front, with over 900 temporary soldiers' cinemas.
A scene from
Maudite soit la guerre
('A curse on war'), a pacifist drama made for Pathé's Belgian subsidiary by Alfred
Machin in 1913, and released just before the outbreak of the War in 1914
Europe's first major military conflict in the modern era obviously proved attractive as a
motion picture subject, as the rapid development of atrocity and war films in each of the
combatant nations suggests. These films often cut across existing forms, as Chaplin's
Shoulder Arms ( 1918), Winsor McKay's animated The Sinking of the Lusitania ( 1918),
and Gance's
J'accuse
(I Accuse, 1919) attest. And the interest both in the new war genre
and in explorations of the horrors and heroism of the First World War continued well
beyond it, from Vidor's The Big Parade ( 1925) and Walsh's What Price Glory ( 1926), to
Kubrick's Paths of Glory ( 1957). Beyond permeating the period's realist films, often in as
muted a form as character reference, it would echo particularly loudly during the
economic crisis of the late 1920s and early 1930s, when reappraisal of the war could
serve the causes of pacifism ( Milestone's 1930 All Quiet on the Western Front and
Renoir's 1937 La Grande Illusion) or militarism ( Ucicky's 1933
Morgenrot
('Dawn')).
The war, then, served not only to dismantle Europe's dominant pre-war industries, but,
ironically, to construct a tacit consensus regarding the national importance of cinema. The
latter point underwent a curious permutation which assisted the US penetration of markets
such as England, France, and Italy, and meanwhile stimulated the distinctive national
identities of the German and Russian cinemas. As the specifically 'national' character of
the European allies' cinema became increasingly associated with the gruelling war effort
and pre-war national identities, the US cinema increasingly appeared as a morale booster
and harbinger of a new internationalism. Chaplin's appeal to French children, workers,
and intellectuals alike outlined the trajectory which American feature films would follow
by the war's end, as US films served the cultural functions of social unification and
entertainment while expressing the emphatically modern Zeitgeist of the post-war era.
The German experience differed considerably. The perceived cultural distinctions which
in part provoked the war and which lurked behind the government's active support of Ufa
would continue to drive the film industry in the post-war era. Although US film
penetration of the German market increased until late in 1916, the taste for American
product acquired by the French, British, and Italians failed to take hold. And the post-war
Aufbruch, or break with the past, also failed to resonate with the cultural values of the
USA, at least as manifest in its films. The late date of US resumption of trade with
Germany, and the extremity of German inflation (which led to an exchange rate of over 4
trillion marks to the dollar in 1923) effectively precluded US interest in the film market
and prolonged Germany's isolation. National cultural needs would be met by national film
production. The Russian situation, although quite different and compounded by a
lingering civil war and economic boycott, shared the same basic dynamic as a
revolutionary culture set out to produce its own revolutionary films.
Europe emerged from the war ridden by debt (mostly to the USA) and physically
traumatized. France, Italy, and Germany faced the additional ordeals of social unrest,
political turmoil, severe inflation, and an influenza epidemic which swept across Europe
killing more people than the war itself. With the exception of Germany, where the film
industry enjoyed relative stability, Europe's motion picture business emerged from the war
in a state of shock. For example, its sometimes successful attempts to produce films
notwithstanding, the French industry turned increasingly to distribution, while Italy
attempted to return to the glories of the spectacle film, but found that international taste
had changed considerably. As the leaders of the pre-war industry attempted to shake off
several years of relative inactivity and re-enter the world of production and international
distribution, they found conditions very much changed by the American studios. The
linkage of big-budget features, new studio technologies and production practices,
expensive stars, and the consequent need to assure investors of large international markets
was difficult to break, especially in the face of ravaged domestic economies and a still
splintered and impoverished Europe. America, by contrast, came out of the war with a
massive and relatively healthy domestic market, and an aggressive and well-oiled studio
system. Moderately sensitive to the needs of the foreign market, and armed with an
international infrastructure of shipping, banking, and film offices, the US industry was in
a position to enjoy the post-war shift in the balance of power. Although the weakened film
industries of several European nations attempted to have protective tariffs erected, such
efforts initially had little effect since the American studios could simply exploit the
advantages of the USA's diplomatic and financial power and block legislation.
But the triumph of American films in the post-war period also reflects the changed
position of cinema within the cultural hierarchy, and, in turn, the broader fabric of cultural
transformations which helped give rise to and took form through the war. The often brutal
disruption of lives, families, work, and values served to shatter lingering nineteenth-
century sensibilities. The differences between Sennett's conception of comedy and Harold
Lloyd's, or between Mary Pickford's embodiment of feminine identity and Theda Bara's,
or between the value systems of The Birth of a Nation ( 1915) and DeMille's
Male and
Female
( 1919), suggest the dimensions of the change that had occurred within sectors of
the American public.
An emphatic break with (and often critique of) the past and a self-conscious embrace of
the modern characterized the post-war scene. But the 'modern' itself was a vexed category.
Post-war Europe quickly defined the modern within an older, élitist, and highly
intellectualized aesthetic sensibility, as the institutional histories of the various '-isms' in
painting, music, and avant-garde film suggest. But the modern as manifest in American
mass culture, and nowhere more apparent than in the Hollywood feature, embodied
democratic appeal, instant gratification, and seamless illusionism. The promise of a
readymade, one-size-fits-all culture reinforced the economic inroads made by the US film
industry in Europe, evident in the rise to western dominance of what has been dubbed the
classical Hollywood cinema. In contrast to a European modernism predicated upon the
self-conscious use of image and cutting patterns, Hollywood's modernism inhered in the
industrialized creation of products driven by the project of telling stories as efficiently and
transparently as possible, deploying such techniques as 'invisible editing' to that end.
Although these divergent senses of the modern would fuel endless cultural debates, the
post-war dominance experienced by the US film industry and the persistence throughout
the west of the signifying practices associated with Hollywood would characterize the
decades to come.
Bibliography
Abel, Richard ( 1984), French Cinema: The First Wave, 1915-1929.
Bordwell, David, Staiger, Janet, and Thompson, Kristin ( 1985), The Classical Hollywood
Cinema.
Cherchi Usai, Paolo, and Codelli, Lorenzo ( 1990). Before Caligari.
Koszarski, Richard ( 1990), An Evening's Entertainment.
Monaco, Paul ( 1976), Cinema and Society.
Reeves, Nicholas ( 1986), Official British Film Propaganda During the First World War.
Thompson, Kristin ( 1985), Exporting Entertainment.