Bhushan Mahadani
Member
As technology has advanced, films have also changed and started improving day by day in all possible ways. The 2005 version of King Kong looks different from the 1933 King Kong version. The new King Kong appears in vivid color, and with the help of CGI he’s a convincingly lifelike beast. The original soundtrack is tinny and shrill; in the newer one, the great ape’s snorts and growls are deep and realistic.
Films have changed in always all ways, says James Cutting, a psychologist at Cornell University who’s been studying the evolution of cinema. Cutting presented some of his findings at MOVIES IN YOUR BRAIN – THE SCIENCE OF CINEMATIC PERCEPTION sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Cutting says “All these things are working to hold our attention better.”
According to Cutting, here are a few of the most important ways in which films have changed in the past century.
Read more at
http://bhushanmahadani.com/films-evolved-last-century-statistically/
Films have changed in always all ways, says James Cutting, a psychologist at Cornell University who’s been studying the evolution of cinema. Cutting presented some of his findings at MOVIES IN YOUR BRAIN – THE SCIENCE OF CINEMATIC PERCEPTION sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Cutting says “All these things are working to hold our attention better.”
According to Cutting, here are a few of the most important ways in which films have changed in the past century.
Read more at
http://bhushanmahadani.com/films-evolved-last-century-statistically/