An interesting feature about (Introduction to Cinema) courses or books is that they often include a "Silent Film Exercise" where students must tell a complete story using only visuals, intertitles, and music—no dialogue. This forces learners to master visual language (shots, angles, editing) before relying on words, revealing how cinema is fundamentally a visual medium. It’s a hands-on way to understand pioneers like Georges Méliès or Eisenstein, showing that film grammar was not born from speech but from image and motion.
An interesting feature about (Introduction to Cinema) courses or books is that they often include a "Silent Film Exercise" where students must tell a complete story using only visuals, intertitles, and music—no dialogue. This forces learners to master visual language (shots, angles, editing) before relying on words, revealing how cinema is fundamentally a visual medium. It’s a hands-on way to understand pioneers like Georges Méliès or Eisenstein, showing that film grammar was not born from speech but from image and motion.