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Вопрос от . ㅤ 19 февраля 2025 15:21

Сократите текст на английском до 7-8 предложений: How It All Began Cinema is much younger than theatre. It was born at the end of the 19th century. The first people who showed the first movies to the public were the Lumier Brothers of France. They did it at the Grand Café, Boulevard des Capucines', Paris, on the 20th February 1896. This was the first cinema show. Very quickly cinema appeared in many other places in all parts of the world. The first films showed moving people and transport, then people were able to see short comedies on the screen. In 1901 France was the first country to produce a dramatic film, The Story of a Crime, then The Great Train Robbery2 appeared in the United States in 1903. At first, people could see films anywhere: in music halls, clubs and shops. By 1908 special film theatres began to give regular programmes. At this time cinema rapidly developed in both the New and the Old World. Charlie Chaplin made his first film, Making a Living, in 1914 in the USA. The Russian film industry was going on its own way. It produced such great films as Protazanov's The Queen of Spades (1916) and Father Sergius (1918). A little later The Battleship "Potemkin" came to the screen. That was Russia's great achievement in cinema. The film director was Sergey Eisenstein. In 1927, Warner Brothers' in Hollywood made the first film in which an actor sang and spoke. The film's title was Jazz Singer. It had three songs and a short dialogue. That opened a new era in films - the era of the "talkies", or sound films. The silent film was dead within a year. The first one hundred percent? sound film, Lights of New York, appeared in 1928, and the first colour films - in the 1930s.

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19 февраля 2025 15:21

Cinema is a relatively young art form compared to theatre, emerging at the end of the 19th century. The Lumier Brothers gave the first public film show in Paris on February 20, 1896, sparking global interest in cinema. Initially, films featured moving people and short comedies, with France producing the first dramatic film, "The Story of a Crime," in 1901, followed by "The Great Train Robbery" in the U.S. in 1903. By 1908, dedicated film theaters started showcasing regular programs, leading to rapid development in cinema worldwide. Notable films included Charlie Chaplin's "Making a Living" in 1914 and Russia's "The Battleship Potemkin," directed by Sergey Eisenstein. The landscape changed dramatically in 1927 with "The Jazz Singer," the first sound film, which marked the beginning of the "talkies" era and the decline of silent films. By 1928, the first fully sound film, "Lights of New York," was released, followed by the introduction of color films in the 1930s.

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сократите текст на английском до 7-8 предложений: How It All Began Cinema is much younger than theatre. It was born at the end of the 19th century. The first people who showed the first movies to the public were the Lumier Brothers of France. They did it at the Grand Café, Boulevard des Capucines', Paris, on the 20th February 1896. This was the first cinema show. Very quickly cinema appeared in many other places in all parts of the world. The first films showed moving people and transport, then people were able to see short comedies on the screen. In 1901 France was the first country to produce a dramatic film, The Story of a Crime, then The Great Train Robbery2 appeared in the United States in 1903. At first, people could see films anywhere: in music halls, clubs and shops. By 1908 special film theatres began to give regular programmes. At this time cinema rapidly developed in both the New and the Old World. Charlie Chaplin made his first film, Making a Living, in 1914 in the USA. The Russian film industry was going on its own way. It produced such great films as Protazanov's The Queen of Spades (1916) and Father Sergius (1918). A little later The Battleship "Potemkin" came to the screen. That was Russia's great achievement in cinema. The film director was Sergey Eisenstein. In 1927, Warner Brothers' in Hollywood made the first film in which an actor sang and spoke. The film's title was Jazz Singer. It had three songs and a short dialogue. That opened a new era in films - the era of the "talkies", or sound films. The silent film was dead within a year. The first one hundred percent? sound film, Lights of New York, appeared in 1928, and the first colour films - in the 1930s.
Cinema is a relatively young art form compared to theatre, emerging at the end of the 19th century. The Lumier Brothers gave the first public film show in Paris on February 20, 1896, sparking global interest in cinema. Initially, films featured moving people and short comedies, with France producing the first dramatic film, "The Story of a Crime," in 1901, followed by "The Great Train Robbery" in the U.S. in 1903. By 1908, dedicated film theaters started showcasing regular programs, leading to rapid development in cinema worldwide. Notable films included Charlie Chaplin's "Making a Living" in 1914 and Russia's "The Battleship Potemkin," directed by Sergey Eisenstein. The landscape changed dramatically in 1927 with "The Jazz Singer," the first sound film, which marked the beginning of the "talkies" era and the decline of silent films. By 1928, the first fully sound film, "Lights of New York," was released, followed by the introduction of color films in the 1930s.