Now Playing: Early Moviegoing and the Regulation of Fun.
Minnett, Valerie
Moore, Paul S. Now Playing: Early Moviegoing and the Regulation of
Fun. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2008. Pp. 250.
Illustrations, photographs.
Now Playing looks at the normalization of movie-going as an
ordinary part of everyday urban experience, bringing together an
impressive amount of research from a variety of sources including
government documents, trade periodicals, religious literature, and
newspapers. The intense local focus on Toronto belies the traditional
context of this study, where Paul Moore argues that film had to be
integrated into the local culture of particular cities before it could
become a national or global mass practice. Toronto, he claims, is
"an ideal bridge between the U.S. and its global markets" (p.
3) because it was treated as part of the U.S. domestic market, but
generated uniquely Canadian responses to Hollywood production. The study
begins in 1906, the year the first theatoriums opened in Toronto, and
ends in 1918 when Moore asserts that movie-going was established as an
ordinary way for the public to participate in the war effort.
Approaching movie-going through its urban social history shows how
the city responded to being used, surveyed, and policed in new, modern
ways. Movie-going presented municipal bureaucrats and civic groups with
unprecedented safety issues and moral questions, while ordinary people
adapted to expanding options and increased regulation over their leisure
time. Moore establishes the local context of movie-going and contends
that integrating and regulating films in Toronto was largely
unproblematic due to the homogeneity of Toronto's
"British-born" population, the strict, moralistic policing of
"Toronto the Good," and striking a balance between commercial
shows for pleasure, and uplifting scientific, educational or religious
films. Ontario's fire-safety law of 1908, the first piece of
provincial legislation to focus on film specifically, called attention
to the need for defining the parameters of socially and physically safe
movie-going. The flammability of celluloid, coupled with the perceived
"social combustibility" of movie audiences prompted swift and
decisive action on the part of legislators and politicians. Rather than
making movie-going innocuous, the fire-safety law laid a foundation for
the further regulation of film.
The balance between local practice and transnational distribution,
and local regulation versus centralized bureaucracy is a major theme of
this study. Entrepreneurs were challenged by the need to respond to both
local concerns and the rhythms of the U.S. film production and
distribution industry during a period of flux. Moore details the shift
from local showmanship to large outside chains dedicated to promoting a
universal form of cinema. The standardization of film showmanship
further defined movie-going as both a local and transnational industry.
The emergence of a centralized bureaucracy of film regulation produced
standardized forms of licensing, censorship and theatre inspection,
expediting efficient police and government surveillance of movie-going.
Moore emphasizes the daily press and its role in engendering a
sense of global spectatorship. This is the most theoretically grounded
portion of this study, with a foundation in the sociological works
produced by Robert E. Park and his Chicago School colleagues. Moore
argues that the introduction of a "rhetoric of commonality"
through the press bonded temporally and spatially separate movie-goers
into a mass audience. Integrating films with serial function in
women's magazines and weekend newspaper editions, for example,
signalled the arrival of movie-going's mass appeal and movie-goers
became increasingly aware that they were part of a transnational
audience. This awareness took on new significance during WWI when
Canadians attended movies as an active form of citizenship. Despite the
relative absence of nationally produced films Moore argues that
movie-going took on a patriotic air. Showmen promoted movie-going as an
ordinary way for city dwellers to participate in the homefront war
effort through fund-raising and recruiting. The state sanctioned mass
movie-going through its wartime amusement tax, funnelling
audience's pocket-money into government coffers.
Moore differentiates his study from other histories of film,
bypassing a discussion of developing film technology and focussing
instead on the social processes and practices that shaped modern
movie-going. While Moore acknowledges that location, cost, class, race
and even theatre architecture are important distinctions that underlie
this history, his conclusion that they "were successfully rendered
subordinate to institutionalized movie going as a common practice of
entire publics" (p. 224) will not satisfy readers interested in its
social context. This book is full of interesting facts, useful
information, is meticulously researched, but remains theoretically
murky. Moore's arguments, while compelling, are not supported by a
clearly recognizable framework. Now playing shows how local urban
experience is relevant to the transnational history of film, but how
this accounts for the rise of movie-going as a global mass practice
remains unsettled.
Valerie Minnett
Carleton University