The History of Cutting - The Birth of Cinema and Continuity Editing

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
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    Take the full Filmmaker IQ course on the History of Continuity Editing with sauce and bonus material at: filmmakeriq.co...
    Cinema began as a novelty - projecting dancing shadows on a screen of simple every day scenes. But through the contributions of talented artists, a new cinematic language of editing emerged. Trace the development of editing from The Lumiere Brothers through Georges Méliès, Edwin S. Porter, and D.W Griffith.
    If you have any further questions be sure to check out our questions page on Filmmaker IQ:
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Komentáře • 159

  • @xxhamedxx01
    @xxhamedxx01 Před 2 lety +7

    The only reason this channel doesn't have millions of subscribers is because the content is so smart that people get raged not understanding it all!

  • @kiafor
    @kiafor Před 10 lety +9

    Hi John! I'm a guy from Iran and I want to thank you thousand times for posting this video just 1 week before my entrance exam of university. your videos are very helpful and make my readings into knowledge.

  • @MDMart
    @MDMart Před 10 lety +57

    I absolutely love your videos. They are simply a must-see for all wannabe filmmakers and generally people working with or interested in, films.
    You way of storytelling is amazing, and I do so hope that you will continue making these videos for years to come :)

  • @sparkybluefox
    @sparkybluefox Před 8 lety +5

    Mr Hess. You have captured history and preserved it for us all.....

  • @enriquevp77
    @enriquevp77 Před 4 lety +4

    An absolutely MASTER CLASS in a topic like editing that is not easy to understand at all, foremost when you are giving your first steps into de art of filmmaking. An essential class for any interested in filmmaking or even editing a simple video.

  • @eXtremeDarian
    @eXtremeDarian Před 10 lety +4

    I make short films so this is gold to me, but I've shown these to people who have no interest in filmmaking and they all agree that these are fascinating! Great on every level!

  • @DrPlatypus1
    @DrPlatypus1 Před 4 lety +4

    I feel far more confident for my Intro to Film midterm tomorrow after watching your video. Thank you!!

  • @XprPrentice
    @XprPrentice Před 7 lety +5

    These vids are so interesting. I'm not a filmmaker per se - I'm an actor - but these vids make me want to be one! And I find this vid particularly interesting today, three years after its posting, in how Griffith was perceived after "Birth of a Nation." Thanks for these vids!

  • @Kittenlike
    @Kittenlike Před 9 lety +2

    Very well-informed and entertaining! D.W. Griffith did not leave Biograph until September of 1913 though. In 1912 he pioneered the use of the cinematic close-up as well.

  • @mel2000
    @mel2000 Před 10 lety

    Excellent historical documentation. Not one second of boredom or confusion.

  • @spewaxol
    @spewaxol Před 4 lety +2

    The Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots (1895) was the first film used Jump Cut to make queen beheaded. They invented the Jump Cut before George Méliès. Created by camera operator Alfred Clarke on 28 August 1895 at the Edison studio in New Jersey.

  • @StefanieHurtado
    @StefanieHurtado Před 8 lety +20

    I'm SO GLAD I found this channel! Thanks for such high quality content :)

  • @abdullahalhout
    @abdullahalhout Před 10 lety +1

    You are an inspiration of true movie making. I love your show and what you are teaching me. I have learned alot and I'll keep on learning as long as you'll teach me...
    Thanks for the amazing effort

  • @chuntguntley8771
    @chuntguntley8771 Před 10 lety +6

    AWESOME!!! thank you for being a friend!

  • @markkaplan1104
    @markkaplan1104 Před 7 lety +2

    This is awesome! As a video editor and being someone fascinated by history, this is captivating!

  • @peixotocerqueira
    @peixotocerqueira Před 7 lety +7

    Your channel is awesome, man. This is the seventh video of yours I'm watching today. Great work, very professional and insightful.

  • @Yvaia
    @Yvaia Před 9 lety +6

    That was extremely interesting and I was able to apply this information for my film analysis. Thank you, subscribed.

  • @DEinarsson
    @DEinarsson Před 10 lety +1

    I imploded with excitement when this pooped up in my sub box, nice to see you back.

  • @abhishekchakravorty234

    You DON'T need to go to film school, all you need is filmmaker iq. Thank you! :)

  • @RafaelFrancoCosta
    @RafaelFrancoCosta Před 10 lety +2

    Your videos are awesome. So well made and researched. Please, keep the good work!! Hello from Brazil!

  • @gaiuscaligula3497
    @gaiuscaligula3497 Před 8 lety +1

    You have a wonderful voice to listen to. This was a great history lesson.

  • @GDF2
    @GDF2 Před 10 lety +2

    As a historian I'm constantly amazed at the parallels that exist between the study of film and the study of history. I've used film and film history numerous times in my work to illustrate various ideas and principles. In relation to this video I see the analogy between editing and the concept concerning the construction of the narrative in historical writing. In both ideas and images are deliberately chosen to make the narrative. However I'm reminded of Jacques Derrida and his concept of "deconstruction", in which he would discuss the unnatural or artificiality of the situation. In this case both film editing and the construction of the narrative in historical writing involve making deliberate choices to advance an idea.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 10 lety +1

      Just wait until we get into montage... ;)

    • @musaran2
      @musaran2 Před 6 lety

      I bet you would find analogies with comics too. Or video games.
      Each media might have different constraints, but it's all about storytelling.

  • @raymondhummel5211
    @raymondhummel5211 Před rokem

    Wonderful explanations of movie cutting techniques, etc. Thank you so much for sharing all this information.

  • @thisizwar1
    @thisizwar1 Před 9 lety

    Thankyou so much! Studying film as an extra module in uni and I'm finding it really difficult so this is helping a lot!

  • @dannyamplex
    @dannyamplex Před 9 lety

    That's it! I've watched three of your video lessons now, and well.. I've learnt too much. Each one is brilliant. I want to re-watch and review all of this glorious history again and again.
    Truly inspired!

  • @tonok_g8873
    @tonok_g8873 Před rokem

    it was an incredible. Im hooked to watch all episodes!

  • @brentdrafts2290
    @brentdrafts2290 Před 8 lety +1

    Dude, you're all the things my parents told me I couldn't do. When i was a teenager and made my own 2001 a space odyssey using a rubics cube as the monolithic center and much of the garage to make a lunar surface of the moon using super8.

  • @javimeler
    @javimeler Před 5 lety +2

    E.S.Porter had access and studied some films from Brighton School. You can see easily that Life in American Fireman (1903) is a remake of Fire! (1901), a James Williamson movie. Williamson filmed also inside the room, changing the point of view (from fireman to victim). You can see also that the beginning is the same transparency circular split screen that “Santa Claus” (George Albert Smith, 1898).

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 5 lety +1

      Studied is a modern way of putting it... Film was so exceedingly rare in those days - they were just all copying each other. If something worked for some guy over there, it would work for me... kind of thing.

    • @javimeler
      @javimeler Před 5 lety

      Filmmaker IQ Yes, i agree than no problem with copying good solutions. In fact, E.S.Porter is a great director because, in the same year, he filmed Train Robbery that far exceeds any Brighton school film. But... the history is the history and it’s not fair not to mention the Brighton School.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 5 lety +1

      This is a 14 minute survey - the fact is it didn't come up in my first research... It is what it is.

  • @whyrural
    @whyrural Před 10 lety +1

    John, this is AWESOME!!!!! Thank you so much for your teaching!!!!

  • @camilominon9249
    @camilominon9249 Před 8 lety +9

    That's amazing, thank you, so so so usefull for my homework!

  • @chefkendranguyen
    @chefkendranguyen Před 10 lety +22

    Dang, I love this channel. Nice episode. :)

  • @itslilarab4837
    @itslilarab4837 Před 5 lety

    man just watched these videos makes me just wanna get a time machine to see what’s in it for me in my future! thanks so much dude for helping me obtain all of this free knowledge! priceless!

  • @ThomasBaxter
    @ThomasBaxter Před 10 lety

    These are such great primers for the uninitiated, like myself. Thanks for posting

  • @PaulKretz
    @PaulKretz Před 4 lety

    Brilliant material! Can't get enough! Cheers and bless you, sir!

  • @aisbelk
    @aisbelk Před 10 lety +2

    Some good 14min video, i hope to see so much more on this channel ! :) Great Work!

  • @victoryzy
    @victoryzy Před 7 lety

    Whew. Writing an essay on a comparison between the past and present of film editing. This is super interesting!

  • @timebombtick
    @timebombtick Před 8 lety +5

    this was very interesting thank you so much.

  • @Pauldjreadman
    @Pauldjreadman Před 3 lety

    You can tell one videos I great when you go back and rewatch :)

  • @mingusjacobs4427
    @mingusjacobs4427 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Very nice video

  • @trv16gel
    @trv16gel Před 10 lety +1

    Great episode, well done

  • @Harold710
    @Harold710 Před 2 lety

    Very well produced, thank you.

  • @mareike4201
    @mareike4201 Před 6 lety

    So glad i found this channel! amazing work!

  • @MrAhmadAtaya
    @MrAhmadAtaya Před 10 lety +1

    Eagerly wait for next video

  • @Glenncharmedone
    @Glenncharmedone Před 9 lety

    This video explained everything so clearly. The way they explained the 180° rule in school was so confusing!

  • @ulearnfx5736
    @ulearnfx5736 Před 10 lety +3

    Truly fascinating. Thank you!

  • @suryareddy3654
    @suryareddy3654 Před 2 lety

    Gained so much knowledge Thank you sir

  • @paulfoley6602
    @paulfoley6602 Před 7 lety

    Great info and presentation . Thanks for putting it all together.

  • @harrypotterisageek
    @harrypotterisageek Před 8 lety

    If you're a semiotician, film has no "language," in terms of a system, but only "utterances." Like Metz when he says "A film is difficult to explain because a film is easy to understand." Because we don't rely on the film and its various edits to tell us what is happening like we rely on the (arbitrary) relation between sound and meaning in language; those edits are secondary because the edits only make sense of what is established in the film through reliance on our ability to perceive sight and sound in order to make disparate things cohere. That was pedantic, maybe, but I did enjoy your video very much.

  • @wisalbe4693
    @wisalbe4693 Před 10 lety +1

    Great presentation as usual, Thank you!

  • @user-gn8gz1vn3b
    @user-gn8gz1vn3b Před rokem

    Very Informative video.

  • @austinlindsay
    @austinlindsay Před 10 lety +3

    You always do an amazing job in your videos!

  • @desrebarnard6720
    @desrebarnard6720 Před 8 lety

    Wonderful series. Thank you!

  • @drusha
    @drusha Před 10 lety

    thank you. now I'm really looking forward for the montage part

  • @DubSte11
    @DubSte11 Před 10 lety

    Another great episode. Thanks.

  • @Kryophyt
    @Kryophyt Před 10 lety

    Great job, really looking forward to the next video. :)

  • @jjsscc462
    @jjsscc462 Před 10 lety

    Great episode, thank you!

  • @patgedeon
    @patgedeon Před 10 lety

    Amazing video once again! I have learned so much! Thank you

  • @mamdouhnaderr9289
    @mamdouhnaderr9289 Před 4 lety

    I love your videos man. I just want you to work on your delivery.

  • @spitefullymy
    @spitefullymy Před 10 lety +2

    Lol you just explained the basic fundamentals of editing and continuity in cinematography in just a few minutes that i've been trying to explain to my friends/ grasp myself for a long time now. Thank you so much.
    BTW: I think it was unfair for you to compare the budget of The Birth of Nation without taking into account inflation with the budget of Intolerance taking into account inflation...
    According to the-numbers.com Intolerance was made for 385,907$.

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 Před 2 lety

    I remember seeing an episode of the tv show “Gilmore Girls “ where in one scene they had a Jeep with round headlights and in the very next scene that Jeep had square headlights! Not too much continuity with that!

  • @huftgoldgold1520
    @huftgoldgold1520 Před 8 lety +3

    8:18 "Under contract ot Biograph" small error in the subtitles, thought I'd try and help. @Filmmaker IQ

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 8 lety +2

      +Argenteus Ignis I love that it took over 91K views before someone caught it - I don't feel so bad.

  • @retrolectrovideo
    @retrolectrovideo Před 10 lety

    Yes, Georges' Jump Cuts...and your magics. Excellent! (-;

  • @stefanweber6380
    @stefanweber6380 Před 10 lety

    So good. Thanks for preparing historical information really interesting.
    Would be cool, if you could make a Video, talking about History of camera movement.

  • @ErikThureson
    @ErikThureson Před 7 lety

    Good stuff! Nicely done!

  • @Neuroneos
    @Neuroneos Před 5 lety +1

    Why do american film buffs always skip from Méliès to Porter, as if the Brighton school never existed? *James Williamson* introduced the narrative techniques used by Porter in a 1901 film called Fire!, and the close-ups were introduced by *George Albert Smith* in films such as Grandma's Reading Glass (1900) or The Big Swallow (1901). Same for Griffith's continuity editing, which was first introduced by Smith in a film called The Kiss in the Tunnel (1899). Look it up. It's common knowledge. The brits did it first.

  • @keirazerrenner2987
    @keirazerrenner2987 Před 9 lety

    Thank you! This helped me a lot!

  • @tylercrypt4870
    @tylercrypt4870 Před 8 lety

    Great video thanks!

  • @johannes914
    @johannes914 Před 10 lety

    Can't wait for the next episode about "montage"

  • @damislav
    @damislav Před 10 lety

    Really good work, best channel on youtobe. Great job.

  • @ignazioc
    @ignazioc Před 7 lety +1

    Lovely videos

  • @CJVideoProductions
    @CJVideoProductions Před 10 lety

    These are FANTASTIC! Thanks for making them! Why link to your other videos on Vimeo and not YT?

  • @fickup9
    @fickup9 Před 9 lety

    I love it!! inspires me a lot, thanks :)

  • @RallySelf
    @RallySelf Před 10 lety

    the jump cut was used in the execution of marry queen of scotts in 1895.

  • @josuerodriguez2350
    @josuerodriguez2350 Před 8 lety

    Very interesting video.

  • @MohammadRafiei-ke7qo
    @MohammadRafiei-ke7qo Před měsícem

    Hi man , I love your work
    If you could tell me what application you use for editing would be a great help
    Thank you

  • @maaykeschurer4358
    @maaykeschurer4358 Před 9 lety

    Excellent

  • @KenHudson
    @KenHudson Před 9 lety

    Very interesting....thanks!

  • @ursinhocapo
    @ursinhocapo Před 7 lety +1

    i'm a big fan!:D

  • @nuan1989
    @nuan1989 Před 10 lety

    this is great!!!!

  • @robem7826
    @robem7826 Před 8 lety

    what are the pros and cons of classical cutting and montage editing?? Ive been watching videos and researching and I cannot understand the cons. I mean the pros is because it makes the film shorter.... I need a better understanding and your great in explaining this subject! please and thanks

  • @JeremyRatzlaff
    @JeremyRatzlaff Před 10 lety

    Brilliant!

  • @TheFlowerPower47
    @TheFlowerPower47 Před 10 lety

    More now!!

  • @swoznia2
    @swoznia2 Před 10 lety +1

    Is it possible that some of these techniques were first used on lost films? I think this is probably a history based on what we can still view...

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 10 lety

      Historians don't just have the films, they can also go on trade publications - though there are a lot of lost films and we will never know what kind of groundbreaking things were accomplished (D.W. Griffith being an exception as most of his films actually survived)

  • @abdullahidk341
    @abdullahidk341 Před 7 lety

    oh shit mind bloing

  • @fritz3440
    @fritz3440 Před 8 lety +2

    How did the early film makers create intertitles, opening and closing credits and such? Did they film a piece of paper with the text written or how did they do it?
    I have searched for the answer everywhere... :(

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 8 lety +8

      +Fritz this is actually part of a future course ;)
      For really early filmmakers they did indeed shoot cards with graphics and lettering. The very first Oscar ceremony even gave away an Oscar for Best intertitles design... But it was the first and only Oscar for that as the transition to sound was underway.
      Into the 30s and beyond they started shooting through glass, painting the titles on the glass and shooting through it. Into the era of Saul Bass they used all graphic design techniques... The Psycho title for instance was really a bunch of 12foot aluminum beams that were stop motion animated

    • @fritz3440
      @fritz3440 Před 8 lety +2

      THANK YOU for the very good answer! I have subscribed to you now, will await the future course!
      Take care and keep up the good work with your videos!

    • @fritz3440
      @fritz3440 Před 7 lety

      Hi! How is it coming along with the course? ;)

  • @edmundironside9435
    @edmundironside9435 Před 4 lety

    I'm pretty sure that Enoch Arden came out in 1911 and was not the first instance of Griffith using cross-cutting. Also, I wouldn't say that The Birth of a Nation was the first blockbuster, that would probably have been Dante's Inferno (1911) (if not then another Italian epic)

  • @CoolDudeClem
    @CoolDudeClem Před 6 lety

    What was the weird noise at around 3:25 for? Caught me off guard.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 6 lety

      +CoolDudeClem weird... Something's up with CZcams as that wasn't there before

  • @shabbbsy
    @shabbbsy Před 10 lety

    I think I just found my coursework reference.

  • @sapirella
    @sapirella Před 8 lety

    you forgot about the "saving in the last moment" of Griffith,..

  • @KevinMAbraham
    @KevinMAbraham Před 3 lety

    HI!! thank you so much for this history lesson!! but i would like to ask, where do you get this information from, like the source materials, which book you read, or anything :) I would like to learn this too for my paper thesis about continuity editing! thank you so much!!

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 3 lety

      Wikipedia is a good start, look in the references in the page to follow the rabbit holes. A good book on this that I've used a lot is "A History of Narrative Film" by David Cook

    • @KevinMAbraham
      @KevinMAbraham Před 3 lety +1

      @@FilmmakerIQ thank you! And i found one too with similar information, the book called Understanding Movies 11th Edition page 154 by Louis Giannetti about history of continuity.

  • @FxTR22
    @FxTR22 Před 10 lety

    Thumbs up

  • @C4Fernandez
    @C4Fernandez Před 7 lety

    On the topic of editing, did you use Premiere Pro to edit this? I used to have this crossfade glitch with older versions of Premiere.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 7 lety

      We use After Effects and Premiere Pro

  • @greenstaraz
    @greenstaraz Před 9 lety +2

    An entire video devoted to a person that would best be forgotten, What he did set the planet backward to this very day. His actions those of Melkor,, an evil that sits in the background affecting all around it

    • @Rallinale
      @Rallinale Před 9 lety

      +Brisdad53
      Considering the video is about D.W. Griffith, I can understand why he/she would write the comment considering D.W. Griffith was a huge racist.
      That said, I don't agree that he should be forgotten and it should be obvious why if you're into film. He is, after all, the director who innovated the style of editing that has become common in most films today. The fact that he was a racist and directed a film that became one of the factors of the KKK's resurgence does not make any of his contributions any less important. With this in mind, there's a very good reason why he should not be forgotten, at least in film history.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 9 lety +1

      +Rallinale I'm not even sure he was a "Huge" racist... He just made a racist film but there's not much evidence he thought about race politics at all. www.slate.com/articles/arts/dvdextras/2003/01/dw_griffith_in_black_and_white.html

    • @Rallinale
      @Rallinale Před 9 lety

      Filmmaker IQ
      Well, that certainly puts Griffith in a different light for me.

    • @prodbywadda
      @prodbywadda Před 8 lety

      +greenstaraz What about Intolerance...

    • @Rallinale
      @Rallinale Před 8 lety

      Wadda
      Funny you mention that. Griffith decided to make that movie as a response to the criticism of The Birth of a Nation, which he perceived as intolerance. Yes, seriously.

  • @juliettezara4400
    @juliettezara4400 Před 3 lety

    Sa fait du bien de savoir que c’est nous les français ont commencer sa.

  • @NowrinMunirJoeeta
    @NowrinMunirJoeeta Před 7 lety

    One more question :) I am making a video for my class. The assignment is "Continuity Editing" can I use parallel cuts? Is parallel cuts allowed in a continuity editing exercise? It would be like the "baptism scene" in God Father.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 7 lety

      I don't think I would consider parallel cutting a part of "continuity editing" - continuity seeks to preserve the connections between time and space - parallel cutting is more of a montage technique.

    • @NowrinMunirJoeeta
      @NowrinMunirJoeeta Před 7 lety

      Filmmaker IQ thank you

  • @GallowaySackett
    @GallowaySackett Před 10 lety

    Thanks for posting. Liked it. Believe TCM would happily broadcast/air your Videos. Do you think Georges Méliès might have kept the camera stationary because of all his special effects, … making mats and travelling mats easier to manage? The influence of ‘theatre’ can’t be overstated though. Look forward to the next part of this editing series.

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 10 lety

      That's a really good question.
      Obviously having a stationary camera makes jump cuts and mattes much easier - I think Méliès and his contemporaries were really stuck with the idea of a shot and scene being one complete visual idea. The idea of a shot being something smaller and a scene being comprised of many shots needed a decade to sink in. D.W. Griffith and filmmakers in his time sort of just started falling into because they were making so many movies and experimenting with different things (450 movies between 1908-1911 meant he was making 2-3 a week).
      This will all get even more interesting when we talk about the Soviet Montage which really takes editing to the next step.

  • @VXDRG
    @VXDRG Před 10 lety

    wow

  • @TheAJNWproductions
    @TheAJNWproductions Před 8 lety

    easy on red man

  • @mingusjacobs4427
    @mingusjacobs4427 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I really enjoyed it

  • @NowrinMunirJoeeta
    @NowrinMunirJoeeta Před 7 lety

    dumb question ," is it true that there is no continuity editing in stop motion animation? "

    • @FilmmakerIQ
      @FilmmakerIQ  Před 7 lety

      Nowrin Munir that's not a dumb question, it's more of a trick question. You can have continuity editing in stop motion. You can go from a wide to close up and you still should respect the 180 rule in a scene even if it's stop motion animation.

    • @NowrinMunirJoeeta
      @NowrinMunirJoeeta Před 7 lety

      Thank you for the reply. It helped.