The first movie with picture and sound was "The Jazz Singer".
A movie using sound was called a "talking" picture, or a "talky".
It was the first "talking picture," where prerecorded sound and dialogue was played with the movie.
First production talkie- or sound film. this was by Warner Brothers who controlled the process, which made cartoons ( Bugs Bunny) and Newsreels live and vivid- and also a remote forerunner, process wise- of TV newcasting.
Sound was added to a movie for the first time in April 1923, it was a short film that was showed in New York City. The first theatrical motion picture with a sound track (only in certain parts of the movie) was "The Jazz Singer" in 1929.
NO. The movie came out in 1941, a good 14 years after sound came into the picture(s).
That the sound or picture doesn't look or sound good.
No, the first picture in color was released in the late 1800's. It has the name "Annabelle" in the title. (It had no sound, though!)
The reason is the movie was illegally and poorly copied.
it had no sound and it was 2 or 3 minutes long
screen, motion, picture, sound, cinema, film, show
Alfred Hitchcock directed the first British movie with sound. The movie was titled Blackmail.
The colors and the picture need to come into focus where as the sound is already in clear pitch.