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Here's a video about the history of showing text messages on film
Sometimes, it takes Hollywood a while to find an
engaging way to depict emerging technologies. For example, the '90s are
littered with strained attempts to make the act of surfing the
Internet—an act that involves a lot of sitting and staring and not
moving—look interesting enough to compete with action blockbusters of the
day. Over the last several years, many filmmakers have tried to do the same for
text messages, with mixed results. For the latest video in his Every Frame A
Painting series, Tony Zhou
takes a look at those attempts.
Zhou—who also
dedicated videos to the comedic
prowess of Edgar Wright and
the chaotic
visual style of Michael Bay—traces the history of filmed text messages from
early experiments with shoving phones into the foreground of shots, to the
current trend of having text float in the air next to phones, as seen on shows
like Sherlock and House Of Cards. Like his other
videos, A Brief Look At
Texting And The Internet In Film is
well-researched and crisply edited, although it may be useless in a few years after text messaging is replaced with some kind direct brain-to-brain
networking system, presenting Hollywood with a whole new problem.
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