Abstract
This article assesses the transnational exhibition, distribution, and marketing of films in Southeast Asia, primarily the Netherlands Indies and British Malaya, around the turn of the last century, by using the American Biograph as a case study. We have found various ‘American Biographs’ in the region – some directly linked to the American parent company, which was one of the world’s leading companies in early film distribution and projection, and others apparently using the Biograph as a branding tool. This article is divided into three sections, each devoted to an itinerant American Biograph company we have chosen to highlight: their Indian subsidiary, and their subsidiary from the Netherlands, the Java Biorama. By considering their film programming choices and ticket price categories, we map and discuss how early film pioneers, with their cinematographic devices and films, moved between colonial borders, as well as how they were received by their audiences and the local press in Southeast Asia. Their exhibitions created spaces where people from different ethnic backgrounds within the colonial societies could come together as film spectators, yet were segregated within that cinematic space through price levels and racial politics. Finally, the article reflects on the impact of the American Biograph companies on the film exhibition circuit in Southeast Asia, signalling that moving pictures were to become a permanent fixture on the popular entertainment scene.
Highlights
The American Mutoscope and Biograph Company reached Southeast Asia in April 1899 when its Dutch sister company sent out Mutoscope devices and a Biograph projector for shows in Batavia, capital of the Netherlands Indies
Our research has found a proliferation of various ‘American Biographs’ in Southeast Asia, some of them directly linked to the American parent company and others building on the Biograph reputation as a branding tool
The variety of people with an ‘American Biograph’, none of whom were from the United States, and their movement between different places, catering to audiences of very different and mixed ethnic backgrounds and cultural preferences, makes this an interesting case study of a transnational early film phenomenon
Summary
The American Mutoscope and Biograph Company reached Southeast Asia in April 1899 when its Dutch sister company sent out Mutoscope devices and a Biograph projector for shows in Batavia, capital of the Netherlands Indies (present-day Jakarta, Indonesia).
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