Explanation of nouns: Brighton school
Brighton School, founded in 1900, is a pioneer group of British films, which pioneered trick photography and simple montage and experimented with various color technologies. Brighton School Brighton, England in the early 20th century. Advocate the creation of real life clips in open-air scenes. The bud of realism. Multi-viewpoint concept of time and space. Representative works: George Albert Smith's Grandmother's Magnifier, Scenes Seen through a Telescope, Mary Jane's Disaster, James Williamson's Attack on China Church, Alf Collins's Wedding in the Car, and Cecil Hephais's Dog Savior. The British "Brighton School" is the first academic school in the world film history. It got its name because it originated in Brighton, a coastal city in England. Most of the representatives of Brighton School are photographers, such as George Albert Smith, James Williamson, Alf Collins and Cecil Hephaes. This school not only attaches importance to the embodiment of real life, but also pays full attention to and shows major social problems. In terms of expression and shooting rhythm, Brighton School brought the early montage to the film, and through the organic combination of film pictures, the film began to have its own unique narrative language. This school opposes Mei Li 'ai's idea that "the screen is the stage", records luxurious stage plays and creates illusory movie magic in theaters and studios, and advocates aiming at society and life like Lumiere and shooting real life clips in open-air scenes. Under the slogan "I put the world before your eyes", the leaders of "Brighton School" made some historical documentaries and short films with realistic tendency, which played an important role in the development trend of world movies.