Information AboutVitaphone |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT VITAPHONE | |
| history of film | |
| film sound production | |
| film and video technology | |
| movie film formats | |
| defunct companies of the united states | |
|
The business was established in the Vitagraph Studios in Brooklyn, New York , and acquired by Warners Bros. in 1925. Warner Bros. introduced Vitaphone on August 6 , 1926 , with the release of the silent feature '' Don Juan '' with music score and sound effects, accompanied by several short subjects featuring comedians and singers, and a greeting from motion picture industry spokesman Will Hays . A Vitaphone-equipped theater used special Projector s, an Amplifier , and Speaker s. The projectors operated as normal motorized silent projectors would, but also provided a mechanical Interlock with an attached Phonograph turntable. When the projector was threaded, the projectionist would align a start mark on the film with the picture gate, and would at the same time place a phonograph record on the turntable, being careful to align the phonograph needle with an arrow scribed on the record's label. When the projector rolled, the phonograph turned at a fixed rate, and (theoretically) played sound in sync with the film passing the picture gate simultaneously. Unlike the prevailing speed of 78 Revolutions Per Minute for phonograph discs, Vitaphone discs were played at 33-1/3 r.p.m. to increase the playing time to match the 11-minute running time of a reel of film. Also unlike most phonograph discs, the needle on Vitaphone records moved from the inside of the disc to the outside. The Vitaphone process made several improvements over previous systems:
These innovations notwithstanding, the Vitaphone process lost the early Format War with sound-on-film processes for many reasons:
Around March 1930, Warner Bros. and First National stopped recording directly to disc, and switched to sound-on-film recording. To make new film titles Backward-compatible with Vitaphone equipped theaters, films produced with sound-on-film processes were released by Warner Bros. and the other Hollywood studios simultaneously in Vitaphone versions as late as 1937. Warner Bros. kept the "Vitaphone" name alive as the name of its short subjects division, The Vitaphone Corporation, most famous for releasing Leon Schlesinger 's '' Looney Tunes '' and '' Merrie Melodies '', later produced by Warners in-house from 1944 on. Though operating on principles so different as to make it unrecognizable to a Vitaphone engineer, Digital Theater Sound is a sound-on-disc system, the first to gain wide adoption since the abandonment of Vitaphone. FURTHER READING • Bradley, Edwin M. (2005). ''The First Hollywood Sound Shorts, 1926-1931'', McFarland & Company. ISBN 0786410302
|
|
|