In the film industry, a feature film is a film made for initial distribution in theaters and being the "main attraction" of the screening (as opposed to any short films which may be screened before it). The term is also used for feature length, direct-to-video and television movie productions.
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KIBERA KID Feature Film Project
( see photos in previous blog... ARTICLE ON OUR FEATURE FILM ... CASTING PROGRESS For The Kibera Kid Feature Film. HOT SUN FILMS/FOUNDATION in VERTIGO UK ...kiberakid.blogspot.com/Feature Film — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
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Independent Feature Film. A blog about independent feature film and film-makers. ... Best Foreign Film went to the Italian feature, Tre lire, Primo Giorno from ...independentfeaturefilm.blogspot.com/Feature Films — Blogs, Pictures, and more on WordPress
Browsing For Feature Films ... a list of the feature films owned by the library? ... Actors, Bollywood, Bollywood Films, Bollywood Music, Director, Feature Film ...en.wordpress.com/tag/feature-films/Four Eyed Monsters " Blog Archive " Feature Film
45 Responses to "Feature Film" ... Feature Film•Video Podcast ... howardowens.com: media blog " Blog Archive " An indie film for the MySpace era Says: ...foureyedmonsters.com/feature_film/In the film industry, a feature film is a film made for initial distribution in theaters and being the "main attraction" of the screening (as opposed to any short films which may be screened before it). The term is also used for feature length, direct-to-video and television movie productions.
Description
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the American Film Institute, and the British Film Institute all define a feature as a film with a running time of 40 minutes or longer. The Centre National de la Cinématographie in France defines it as a 35 mm film which is longer than 1,600 metres, which comes out to exactly 58 minutes and 29 seconds for sound films, and the Screen Actors Guild gives a minimum running time of 80 minutes. Today, a feature film is usually between 80 and 210 minutesFact: date=February 2008; a children's film is usually between 60 and 120 minutesFact: date=February 2007. An anthology film is a fixed sequence of short subjects with a common theme, combined into a feature film.
History
The term evolved from the days when the cinema-goer would watch a series of short subjects before the main film. The shorts would typically include newsreels, serials, animated cartoons and live-action comedies and documentaries. These types of short films would lead up to what came to be called the "featured presentation": the film given the most prominent billing and running multiple reels. There was no sudden jump in the running times of films to the present-day definitions of feature-length; the "featured" film on a film program in the early 1910s gradually expanded from two to three to four reels.
Early proto-features had been produced in America and France, but were released in individual scenes, leaving the exhibitor the option of running them together. The American company S. Lubin released a Passion Play in January 1903 in 31 parts, totalling about 60 minutes. The French company Pathé Frères released a different Passion Play, La Vie et la passion de Jésus Christ, in May 1903 in 32 parts running about 44 minutes. There were also full-length records of boxing matches.
Based on length, the first feature film was the 70-minute film The Story of the Kelly Gang (1906) from Australia. The first European feature was the 90-minute film L'Enfant prodigue (France, 1907), although that was basically an unmodified record of a stage play; Europe's first feature adapted directly for the screen, Les Misérables, came from France in 1909. The first Russian feature was Defence of Sevastopol in 1911. The first UK features were the documentary With Our King and Queen Through India (1912), filmed in Kinemacolor, and Oliver Twist (1912). The first American features were a different production of Oliver Twist (1912), From the Manger to the Cross (1912), and Richard III (1912), the latter starring actor Frederick Warde. The first Asian feature was Japan's The Life Story of Tasuke Shiobara (1912), the first Indian feature was Raja Harishchandra (1913), the first South American feature was Brazil's O Crime dos Banhados (1913), and the first African feature was South Africa's Die Voortrekkers (1916).




















