Movie Timeline1894 – The world’s first Kinetoscope Parlor opens in New York City: customers paid 25 cents to watch ten, 20 second films such as “Rooster,” “Trapeze,” and “Barber Shop”
1895 – First communal movie theater, with a film projected onto a screen, opens in NYC; it shows an eight-minute boxing film
1915 – First 3-D movie, “Jim the Penman,” premieres at Astor Theatre in New York
1927 – Hollywood’s first “talkie”, “The Jazz Singer” premieres
1932 – Walt Disney releases the animated film “Flowers and Trees” in color
1933 – First drive-in movie theatre built in Camden, New Jersey
1939 – “Gone with the Wind” and “Wizard of Oz” are released in Technicolor
1951 – Crosby Video is developed, the first prototype of a videocassette recorder
1953 – NBC airs the first national color television broadcast
1959 – “The Scent of Mystery” premiered in Smell-O-Vision, in which over 30 scents were pumped into the theatre during the film
1982 – “Tron,” an animated film uses 15 minutes of computer imagery, the most yet
1984 – The Supreme Court rules that videocassettes do not present a copyright infringement
1987 – Avid Technologies company, now a master of digital editing, is formed
1995 – “Toy Story” is released, the first full-length computer-animated feature
1996 – “The English Patient” becomes the first digitally edited film to win an Academy Award
1998 –“The Last Broadcast” is released; it is made on a video camera with home computer equipment
2002 – “Star Wars: Attack of the Clones” is released; it is made on a digital camera, without film
2008 – The special effects wizardry of “The Dark Knight” blows away the box office All information gathered from Scott Kirsner’s book "Inventing the Movies: Hollywood’s Epic Battle Between Innovation and the Status Quo," from Thomas Edison to Steve Jobs. Timeline compiled for web by Molly Webster. In this segment, Ira talks with Scott Kirsner, author of "Inventing the Movies: Hollywood's Epic Battle Between Innovation and the Status Quo, from Thomas Edison to Steve Jobs." We'll look at how Hollywood became a driving force in the invention of new technologies -- from Technicolor to the rise of digital special effects -- and how new ideas and technologies, such as the Internet, are still shaping the movie industry today.
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Produced by Molly Webster
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