How Technicolor Changed Storytelling
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2015/02/technicolor-at-100/385039/
In the dawn of the age of cinema, adding color to black-and-white films was something like "putting lip rouge on Venus de Milo." That is to say, it had the potential for disastrous, garish results. And that's how the legendary director Albert Parker referred to the process of colorizing motion pictures in 1926, according to The New York Times that year.
Parker's lipstick-on-the-Venus de Milo line wasn't originally hisit was the same comparison famously used by silent film star Mary Pickford to lament the rise of talkies. As with sound, adding color to motion pictures represented a revolutionary shift in onscreen storytellingand not everyone was convinced that change was worthwhile. Even those who were excited about color filmmaking felt trepidation.
"The color must never dominate the narrative," Parker told the Times. "We have tried to get a sort of satin gloss on the scenes and have consistently avoided striving for prismatic effects... We realize that color is violent and for that reason we restrained it."
Today, we're accustomed to seeing color choices set the tone for a scene, a filmeven an entire body of work. A supercut of Stanley Kubrick's use of supersaturated reds to ratchet up tension recently made the rounds on the Internet. (It contains some graphic footage from films like The Shining.)