[1] Moving images are so pervasive in our lives today

that it is hard to imagine a time when people did without

them. They’ve become an essential element in the way we

[4] communicate, the way we think. They’ve certainly

influenced every other form of art in some way.

When photography was invented in 1839, many

[7] artists were repulsed by the new phenomenon. The visual

arts of painting and sculpture had reigned for millennia. A

painting wasn’t just a reproduction — it transformed the

[10] objective reality which it portrayed into something new, a

result which contained a mysterious quality that, for lack of

a better phrase, was a part of the artist’s soul. The new

[13] invention, which reflected reality back to us through a

mechanical device, seemed cold and frightening.

People have always remembered, and tried to

[16] preserve and transmit their memories through time. History

was recorded through the written word. The wisdom of the

past was transmitted through the myth, the story, and later

[19] the epic poem, drama and novel.

I doubt if I am the only person who, while

watching an old movie, has had the morbid thought occur

[22] to him that “Everyone in the film is dead now”. Yet, they

are still on the screen, moving, laughing, dancing, just as

they did when alive.

[25] The Lumieres began to show their short films in

1895. They were a sensation. Imagine if you can the

astonishment experienced by the audiences, to see a

[28] projected moving image on a large screen. One effect was

fright. It is said that when the Lumieres showed their film of

the arrival of a train at a station, the audience jumped back

[31] from the screen as if they were going to be run over by the

oncoming train.

Internet: (adapted).

Based on the text above, judge the following item.

The author of the text believes he is the only person who thinks that people shown in old films are already dead.