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We can understand from the passage that in silent films, ..... .
As strange as it seems today, "talking" films
were not universally welcome in the 1920s.
Silent films were highly respected as an
extension of the art of mime, as actors had to
use exaggerated gestures to help convey what
was happening. Also they could immediately
be understood by audiences in any country
regardless of language. So the advent of sound
was resisted to some extent; it was viewed by
some as a potential threat to an actor's skill and
his marketability. Despite the objections,
within a few years of the invention of
cinematography in the 1890s, a number of
pioneers were experimenting with ways to
combine sound and vision. However, early
attempts were unsuccessful, largely because of
the problems of amplifying the sound enough
for the whole audience to hear it.