Word: camera
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Full-page photographs of the "camera study" type gave effective close-ups of a locomotive's cylinders spewing steam, of the sousaphone ("oom-pah") horn player at the county fair...
...evolves its own form of grand opera. His voice, for all its beauty, is small-not an opera voice. Yet such a singer as Novarro would be far less absurd on a grand opera stage than the rotund divas and stout heroes of grand opera would be before the camera. The effectiveness of the pastel-tinted act from Pagliacci in The Call of the Flesh makes it seem likely that the cinema will have its opera and that it will bring into existence a new type of opera star-men and women who may lack the volume or tone necessary...
Photography of college subjects will be required of candidates in the photographic department. They need not own a camera; CRIMSON cameras will be supplied...
...fair entertainment. Richard Arlen as "Pink" Barker turns his handsome profile often and to good advantage towards the camera. Robert Gleckler is adequate as Rogue Schultz. Fay Wray as Daisy is a bit too literate for a waif reared on an island where cultural advantages were few. Best shot: Diver Arlen meeting the cannibals...
...group of motion pictures in which all of the elements of film making are carried to their highest refinement. The photography of the Alpine winter is in itself so striking that it could assure the success of the picture. At times it is impossible to conceive of where the camera could have been. But there is no one individual feature that can be singled out as better than any other. The daring flying of Germany's greatest war ace, the able directing, and the excellent acting of a European cast all contribute to make this one of the pictures that...