Early movies, known as silent films, did not have sound, they consisted only of moving pictures. When movies began to be made with sound, the art of the motion picture entered the sound era.
by practicing and watching her movies and prosecing your voice to sound like her
dance me outside
Before productions had massive, technologically equipped sound stages to film on, they filmed outside. This made film makers reliant on sunshine if they needed light in for the shot.
Charles Urban and Albert Smith invented 1908 the first color movie. The movie is called "A Visit To The Seaside"!
First silent movies had no sound, but tv had always sound from the start.
1920s
Silent Pictures
Early movies, known as silent films, did not have sound, they consisted only of moving pictures. When movies began to be made with sound, the art of the motion picture entered the sound era.
Talkies is what the people of the early 1930s called the sound films, as opposed to silent films."Talkies" is a now-obsolete term for moving pictures that have a sound track. Originally, moving pictures (movies) were silent. When sound was added, they were called "talkies." Since sound is now an essentially universal characteristic of motion pictures, there is no longer a need to distinguish films with sound from other films, so the word has fallen out of use.
yawn
boring the sound and sound effects add to the horror in a scary movie.
Well, the first movies came out around the late 1890's and the early 1900's they started out silent and short then as the technology got better they made them have sound.
Because it is a lot more fun and easier to watch movies without having to read subtitles all the time, plus not everyone can read.
Silent Movies were called 'Silents', or Golden Silents, because they were (silent). One famous example of a Silent is The Sheik (1921), starring Rudolph Valentino as Ahmed Ben Hassan, by Paramount Pictures. FYI... • The 1920s were known as The Silent Era. • Sound was not introduced into movies until 1923. • Talkies (movies with sound) replaced Silents in 1930.
Showing a movie without sound would still be considered a public performance, which would require a license.
The name given to movies with sound during the 1920s was "talkies".