Evolution of Science Fiction Cinema: The Early 20th Century

Modern day science fiction (scifi) films can find its roots in the beginnings of cinema in the early part of the 20th century. Filmmaking evolve together with photographic and special effects technology. Some of which are still adapted in one form or another in modern cinema. Contemporary scifi films can find its influence from this early period.

Regular camcorders have built in special effects features that were derived from this early film making techniques.

This article will touch on some of the films that have been an influence in the evolution of science fiction cinema.

The early silent films were short and a novelty, mostly to show off the technology of the new entertainment rather than tell a story. The subject could be everyday life, events or comedy usually accompanied by live music as the medium had no sound.
Films were increasingly drawing crowds who can’t get enough. The film industry boomed churning out more movies to supply demand. Film studios became lucrative, people got into the film business.

George Melies was a stage magician when he watched his first demonstration of the Lumiere brothers’ camera. Melies then bought a camera and begun his film career. Georges Melies would bring magic to the cinema with his photographic effects and tricks that were a marvel at the time.

He would introduce multiple exposures, time-lapse photography, dissolves and other effects. His most well known movie, the blockbuster of its time was “Trip to the Moon“.

Trip to the Moon

Written and directed by Georges Melies in 1902, with help from his brother Gaston. The first scifi film ever made had a running time of 14 minutes at 16 fps; Where the average running time for films of that era was 3 minutes. The most famous and popular of all George Melies films its special effects and animation were innovative for its time.

Loosely based on Jules Verne’s Earth to the Moon and H.G. Wells’ The First Men in the Moon. The film depicts man’s first attempt to the moon. The film includes the familiar scene where the spaceship hits the eye of the man in the moon.

 

Film directors were experimenting in cinematic style. Movies were evolving into an art form. German cinema was a leader in the early days with its expressionism, One of the well known directors was Fritz Lang and his most famous film was Metropolis.

Metropolis
Fritz Lang’s dystopian vision of the future set in the year 2026. The silent scifi film was released in 1927 produced with the budget of 7 million Reichsmark (equivalent to around $200 million in 2005.)

Metropolis depicts a social struggle between the thinkers/planners living high above in the skyscrapers of Metropolis and the workers living below who toil endlessly for them.

The film’s epic detail in design and its elaborate visual effects would influence later scifi films like Blade Runner, The Fifth Element, The Matrix. Metropolis’ Robot-Gynoid Maria inspired the design for Star Wars Droid C3PO.

Novel
Official Site


The advent of sound captivated audiences, movies began having “sound effects” while music was utilized to give an emotional impact.

King Kong

The movie that popularized the giant monster genre retells the story of beauty and the beast. Produced and directed by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack its innovative special effects and stop motion animation was done by Willis O’Brien who brought the monster gorilla to life. Willis O’Brien pioneered stop motion techniques that later SFX artists would honor him as founder and father. CGI animation can trace its roots to this film.

King Kong broke box-office records at its opening in 1933, its success saved RKO studios from bankruptcy. In later re-releases it still managed to gross at the box office. King Kong inspired a number of remakes the best one by Peter Jackson in 2005.

The image of King Kong on top of the Empire State building has become a familiar pop icon.

 

Flash Gordon
Adapted from the popular comic strip Flash Gordon by Alex Raymond was a space opera serialized in 1936. Budgeted at $350,000 the most expensive serial at that time.

Movie serials were 30 minute shorts shown before the main feature. Serials introduced the cliffhanger ending, making movie audiences return and watch the next episode.

Flash Gordon introduces many plot elements common in scifi films; The evil ruler bent on conquest, a hero fighting impossible odds, friendly allies or sidekicks. It also introduced the use of “ray guns” and other high tech props.

Flash Gordon used the scrolling text introduction to brief viewers on previous episodes. George Lucas’s Star Wars films adapted the scrolling text at the beginning of each film, homage to the early movie serials.

Early Science Fiction films were known for its innovation in visual effects that have evolved and adapted in today’s computerized technology. Common scifi story elements introduced in this early era would show up in later generations of films. Science Fiction in cinema wouldn’t be the same if not for these early pioneers.

Early SciFi Films Playlist

Entertainment Earth

17 Responses to “Evolution of Science Fiction Cinema: The Early 20th Century”


  1. 1 Randy Nichols

    I found your site on google blog search and read a few of your other posts. Keep up the good work. Just added your RSS feed to my feed reader. Look forward to reading more from you.

    - Randy Nichols.

  2. 2 dano

    I remember watching Flash Gordon (in black & white) when I was a kid in early 70s. We had a lot of reruns in Malaysia then. It was very “no tech” I think but was cool then.

  3. 3 Jenny

    thanks for dropping by my site. :) you have a pretty nifty site yourself. hope to see you come by again!

  4. 4 Azlan Hussain (the online business boy)

    scifi has always been my favourites.. keep reminding me of the first intergalactic drama that I love so much then.. Battle Star Galactica..

    cheers,

    PS: Great post.. You deserve it.. ;)

  5. 5 Dead Rooster

    As a rare book dealer, I’ve sold copies of the original Wells and Verne 1st editions used as reference for A Trip to the Moon. Very cool books and a very cool movie (I wish there was more of it). I love this stuff.

  6. 6 SF Girl

    Great synopsis of the early and classic SF movies that influenced both movie makers and movie goers alike. I recall how, after seeing just a portion of Metropolis (the first scene in the factory), I have kept that dark and powerful imagery with me in my thoughts of dystopian futures… I write visually and I’m sure it influenced my work.

  7. 7 Darrin Vindiola

    Hey there! Found you through “Joeprah” via his blog catalog widget, and am hooked! Great site!

    I remember seeing that old “man in the moon” clip when I was very young, and it kind of freaked me out. After that, I would always stare up at the moon while we were driving at night, swearing that there was a face looking down on us!
    Cheers!

  8. 8 KJ - Dirty Blue Widgets

    That’s the wonderful thing about the older Sci-Fi films. Trip to the Moon, Metropolis, and a handful of others are rich with imagery that has the tendency to stay in the mind of the viewer. It’s a quality that I actually haven’t seen in any film in the genre in recent memory.

    This is all the more amazing to me in light of the notable progression in special effects technology over the years. I suppose bigger, slicker, flashier graphics aren’t the deciding factor. Nothing beats imagination and the ability to set a mood. Something that directors like Georges Melies were masters of.

  9. 9 Google Shadow

    Nice site, hope I could read more of that again.

  10. 10 Google Shadow

    Nice site, hope I could read more of that again.

  11. 11 barry

    I thought the original king kong was by far better then the new king kong. I think I just like the old school effects better then the newer cg spin on things.

  12. 12 Andy

    Good historical review. Interesting to reading and understanding of vfx evaluetion. Great thanks. :-)

  13. 13 NBA Tickets

    The article brings back some good old memories :) Thanks for the great review. Nowadays the movies are not that bad either.

  14. 14 John Fisher

    The King Kong movie will always be in my top 5 sci-fi movies of all time, aw the memories..:)

  15. 15 Movie

    nice post..thanks

  16. 16 HUD 1 Form

    I remember that movie from when I was a kid. I also remember that the first time I saw the picture of the moon, I thought it was a giant cookie. :)

  17. 17 buzzing ear

    Ahhh, I remember the good old days and the awesome effects movies had back then. I think we are starting to go backwards though with all this cg in movies nowadays. Just my opinion.

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