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studio system
(redirected from Studio era)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

studio system

System whereby U.S. movie companies controlled all aspects of production, distribution, and exhibition. In the 1920s film studios such as Paramount and MGM acquired theatre chains to strengthen their vertical control of the industry, and Warner Brothers, RKO, and Twentieth Century-Fox built similar empires soon thereafter. Studio heads exerted control over the types of movies to be made and the directors and actors to be hired; only a few directors maintained some independent control over their films. The studio system also developed the “star system,” by which certain actors and actresses were groomed for stardom, with studio executives choosing their roles, publicizing their glamorized offscreen lives, and keeping them under control through long contracts. The system declined after a 1948 Supreme Court decision forced the large studios to sell their theatre chains and increasing competition from television forced studios to limit their staffs, and by the 1960s it had effectively ended.



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Part of what attracts these musicians to the Abbey Road studio era is the Beatles stopped touring before the studio versions came out and never played them live.
In fact, an analysis of the novel's rejection by Hollywood may seem an exercise in the obvious: Hollywood studios of the studio era (1928-1948) were oligopolies invested in producing conservative films thought to be universally consumable.
Given unheard-of artistic control at the height of the classic studio era, Welles' innovations still influence all that's good about cinema today.
 
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