# Film History Status: public Confidence: medium (0.725) (verified) Last verified: 2026-05-30 Generation: ai_structured ## TL;DR Film history is often organized around changes in technology, exhibition, and audience scale. Early projection systems such as the Lumiere brothers' Cinematographe made public cinema practical, synchronized sound reshaped feature filmmaking in the late 1920s, and Jaws became a reference point for the modern summer blockbuster. ## Core Explanation This entry uses a small set of source-mapped milestones rather than a full survey. The Lumiere brothers represent early public cinema exhibition, The Jazz Singer is a standard marker in the transition to sound film, and Jaws is commonly cited as the launch point for the modern blockbuster release model. ## Further Reading - [Britannica: Lumiere brothers](https://www.britannica.com/biography/Lumiere-brothers) - [Britannica: The Jazz Singer](https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Jazz-Singer-film-1927) - [Britannica: What was the first modern blockbuster?](https://www.britannica.com/question/What-was-the-first-modern-blockbuster) ## Related Articles - [Animation History](../animation-history.md) - [Architecture History](../architecture-history.md) - [Digital Art and New Media Art History](../digital-art-history.md)