{"title":"Serialized space: Chinatown iconography in Universal’s The Master Key","authors":"Kim K. Fahlstedt","doi":"10.1080/17460654.2022.2093243","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACT Late in 1914, Universal released The Master Key, a motion picture serial in 15 installments. Robert Z. Leonard directed and starred, and the project was marketed as the ‘most expensive serial yet’. The weekly film release was paralleled by a syndicated newspaper feuilleton, illustrated by stills from the motion pictures. Stills were also incorporated into an illustrated reissue of Fleming Wilson’s story, as well as in promotional materials, like illustrated ads and a 20-page poster stamp album published by the Wentz Printing Company. By way of a cross-media investigation of the (1914) serial The Master Key, this study contributes a case in point of how film stills circulated outside the movie theater. The film material has been reported lost, but some reels have been preserved at the Library of Congress. One of the preserved reels contains the episode set in San Francisco’s Chinatown. For this paper, various materials from The Master Key’s-cross media release have been acquired through online fan forums and collectible auctions. Following recent historical studies on film serials and the ”seriality” of stock characters, Chinatown scenes and the picturesque and efforts to write spatial film history, this paper argues that the proliferation of film images across media formats conceptualized The Master Key’s imagery of San Francisco Chinatown as a ”serialized” space, standardizing cinematic iconography in the public eye.","PeriodicalId":42697,"journal":{"name":"Early Popular Visual Culture","volume":"253 1","pages":"412 - 426"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Early Popular Visual Culture","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/17460654.2022.2093243","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT Late in 1914, Universal released The Master Key, a motion picture serial in 15 installments. Robert Z. Leonard directed and starred, and the project was marketed as the ‘most expensive serial yet’. The weekly film release was paralleled by a syndicated newspaper feuilleton, illustrated by stills from the motion pictures. Stills were also incorporated into an illustrated reissue of Fleming Wilson’s story, as well as in promotional materials, like illustrated ads and a 20-page poster stamp album published by the Wentz Printing Company. By way of a cross-media investigation of the (1914) serial The Master Key, this study contributes a case in point of how film stills circulated outside the movie theater. The film material has been reported lost, but some reels have been preserved at the Library of Congress. One of the preserved reels contains the episode set in San Francisco’s Chinatown. For this paper, various materials from The Master Key’s-cross media release have been acquired through online fan forums and collectible auctions. Following recent historical studies on film serials and the ”seriality” of stock characters, Chinatown scenes and the picturesque and efforts to write spatial film history, this paper argues that the proliferation of film images across media formats conceptualized The Master Key’s imagery of San Francisco Chinatown as a ”serialized” space, standardizing cinematic iconography in the public eye.
1914年末,环球影业发行了15部系列电影《万能钥匙》。罗伯特·z·伦纳德(Robert Z. Leonard)担任导演和主演,该项目被宣传为“迄今为止最昂贵的连续剧”。每周电影上映的同时,一份联合出版的报纸也刊登了电影的剧照。弗莱明·威尔逊的故事的插图再版,以及宣传材料,如插图广告和由温茨印刷公司出版的20页海报邮票册,都采用了剧照。通过对(1914)系列电影《万能钥匙》的跨媒体调查,本研究为电影剧照如何在电影院外传播提供了一个恰当的案例。据报道,电影材料已经丢失,但一些胶卷被保存在国会图书馆。其中一盘保存完好的录像带包含了发生在旧金山唐人街的那一集。本文通过网上粉丝论坛和收藏品拍卖获取了《万能钥匙》跨媒体发布的各种资料。本文根据近年来对电影连续剧的历史研究,以及对固定人物、唐人街场景和风景如画的“系列性”的研究,以及对空间电影史的写作努力,认为电影图像的跨媒体形式的扩散,使《钥匙之门》对旧金山唐人街的意象概念化为一个“系列化”的空间,规范了公众眼中的电影图像。