The" Jazz singer" with Al Jolson is often thought of as the first full "talkie film", but
The first all-talking (or all-dialogue) picture was a gangster film - Warners' experimental entry with sound and dialogue was director Brian Foy's crude Lights of New York (1928).
Nonetheless, it had 24 transitional titles. [All ten of 1928's 'all-talking' films were made at Warners.] The firstall-talkie picture in Great Britain, Blackmail (1929), was made by British director Alfred Hitchcock. The film was originally released as a silent film, but the studio pressured Hitchcock into adding dialogue sequences (with innovative post-synchronization techniques) for a talkie version. The suspenseful film was advertised by posters: "See & Hear It - Our mother tongue as it should be - SPOKEN! 100% Talkie. 100% Entertainment. Hold everything till you've heard this one!"
Edison Film and Sound Edison Film and Sound
Talkies
The first motion picture was The Horse In Motion(1878).
it had no sound and it was 2 or 3 minutes long
A motion picture with sound
James Ross Cameron has written: 'Servicing sound equipment' -- subject(s): Equipment and supplies, Silent films, Sound, Radio, Electricity, Television 'Sound motion pictures' -- subject(s): Sound, Silent films, Equipment and supplies 'Motion picture projection and sound pictures' -- subject(s): Sound, Equipment and supplies, Motion pictures, Sound motion pictures, Motion picture projection, Silent films 'Servicing motion picture sound equipment' -- subject(s): Silent films
Louis Lumiere invented first talking motion picture.
Association of Motion Picture Sound .
hi the first motion talking picture was made in 1906.
The first motion picture was The Horse In Motion(1878).
Probably several things, but one that comes to mind: he was the first US president to appear in a "talkie" (a motion picture with sound).
The first movie with picture and sound was "The Jazz Singer".