Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - The significance of movies

The significance of movies

The significance of the film is that its appearance only makes the world look more real in the eyes, without concealment, and makes people's perspectives broader and broader.

Enrich the audience's thinking angle, make it meet with the original ideas and get the enlightenment of the new spirit. The world is difficult. The more dimensions people see, the more real the world will be in their eyes.

Extended data

Cinematography: Photography also originated in Europe in the19th century. 1839, Daguerre, a Frenchman, fixed the image permanently by chemical method according to the pinhole imaging principle in painting after the Renaissance, and "Daguerre Photography" came into being.

1872, photographer Edward Curtrich was the first to apply "photography" to continuous shooting. In five years, he used many cameras to shoot a running horse continuously, which was successful in 1878.

1882, French men developed a "photographic gun" that can shoot continuously by using the intermittent principle of revolvers. Later, he invented the film continuous camera. Finally, a camera began to use a group of cameras instead of curtains to shoot moving objects. In Europe, scientists and inventors from many countries have also developed different types of cameras.