Notes
The following material is copied from Wikipedia:
1970s and Onwards: Innovation in Popular Culture – Around the World.
- The Kingdom and the Beauty (1959) dir. Li Han-hsiang
- Feminine
- Musical
- A Touch of Zen (1971) dir. King Hu
- Widescreen
- Aggressive
- Faster
- Enter the Dragon (1973) dir. Robert Clouse
- Rage
- Not much editing
- A Better Tomorrow (1986) dir. John Woo
- Betrail
- Iron Monkey (1993) dir. Yuen Woo-ping
- Cutting fast
- The Matrix (1999) dir. Lilly Wachowski & Lana Wachowski
- Influenced by other films
- Once Upon a Time in China (1991) dir. Tsui Hark
- Different angles of camera
- New Dragon Gate Inn (1992) dir. Raymond Lee
- A remake of a movie
- Mughal-e-Azam (1960) dir. K. Asif
- White and black
- Devi (1960) (introduced in Episode 6) dir. Satyajit Ray
- Mausam (1975) dir. Gulzar
- Musical drama
- Zanjeer (1973) dir. Prakash Mehra
- Close-ups
- Fear
- Rage
- Sholay (1975) dir. Ramesh Sippy
- One of the most influential in the story of film
- Drama
- Inventive
- Musical scene
- The Message: The Story of Islam (1976) (a.k.a. Mohammad, Messenger of God) dir. Moustapha Akkad
- Four months to build the sets
- The Making of an Epic: Mohammad, Messenger of God (1976) dir. Geoffrey Helman & Christopher Penfold
- Second version
- The Sparrow (1972) dir. Youssef Chahine
- The Exorcist (1973) dir. William Friedkin
- Middle-class home
- Gitl possessed by the devil
- Tell a story from beginning to end
- A Guy Named Joe (1943) dir. Victor Fleming
- Soft black and white
- Jaws (1975) dir. Steven Spielberg
- Wanted realism
- Dolly zoom
- The Making of Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (1995) dir. Laurent Bouzereau
- Vertigo (1958) (introduced in Episode 4) dir. Alfred Hitchcock
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) dir. Steven Spielberg
- Music rises
- Jurassic Park (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg
- Looking but doesn’t show
- Cuts then show
- Star Wars (1977) (introduced in Episode 1) dir. George Lucas
- Hidden fortress = Some of the Star Wars characters
- The Hidden Fortress (1958) dir. Akira Kurosawa
- Triumph of the Will (1935) (a.k.a. Triumph des Willens) (introduced in Episode 4) dir. Leni Riefenstahl