Cinema of the United States (Hollywood) | |
---|---|
No. of screens | 40,393 (2017)[1] |
• Per capita | 14 per 100,000 (2017)[1] |
Main distributors | |
Produced feature films (2016)[2] | |
Fictional | 646 (98.5%) |
Animated | 10 (1.5%) |
Number of admissions (2017)[4] | |
Total | 1,239,742,550 |
• Per capita | 3.9 (2010)[3] |
Gross box office (2017)[4] | |
Total | $11.1 billion |
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The cinema of the United States, primarily associated with major film studios collectively referred to as Hollywood, has significantly influenced the global film industry since the early 20th century.
Classical Hollywood cinema, a filmmaking style developed in the 1910s, continues to shape many American films today. While French filmmakers Auguste and Louis Lumière are often credited with modern cinema's origins,[5] American filmmaking quickly rose to global dominance. As of 2017, more than 600 English-language films were released annually in the U.S., making it the fourth-largest producer of films, trailing only India, Japan, and China.[6] Although the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand also produce English-language films, they are not directly part of the Hollywood system. Due to this global reach, Hollywood is often considered a transnational cinema,[7] with some films released in multiple language versions, such as Spanish and French.
Contemporary Hollywood frequently outsources production to countries including the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. The five major film studios—Universal Pictures, Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros., Walt Disney Studios, and Sony Pictures—are media conglomerates that dominate U.S. box office revenue and have produced some of the most commercially successful film and television programs worldwide.[8][9]
In 1894, the world's first commercial motion-picture exhibition was held in New York City using Thomas Edison's kinetoscope[10] and kinetograph.[11] In the following decades, the production of silent films greatly expanded. New studios formed, migrated to California, and began to create longer films. The United States produced the world's first sync-sound musical film, The Jazz Singer in 1927,[12] and was at the forefront of sound-film development in the following decades.
Since the early 20th century, the U.S. film industry has primarily been based in and around the thirty-mile zone, centered in the Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles County, California. The director D. W. Griffith was central to the development of a film grammar. Orson Welles's Citizen Kane (1941) is frequently cited in critics' polls as the greatest film of all time.[13] Hollywood is widely regarded as the oldest hub of the film industry, where the earliest studios and production companies originated, and is the birthplace of numerous cinematic genres.[14]
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