Forms of filmmaking that would become film genres were mostly defined in other media before
Thomas Edison devised the
Kinetograph in the late 1890s. Genres, such as
adventure fiction were developed as written fiction. In the early Hollywood cinema, early adventure cinema were both original stories as well as adaptations of popular media such as adventure stories, magazines, and folk tales. Films were adapted from adventure stories such as ''
King Solomon's Mines (1885), She (1887), and Treasure Island'' (1883). Tasker described both action and adventure cinema are resistant to any historical evolutionary chronology. Both genres are self-reflexive and draw from conventions of other genres ranging from horror to historical imperial adventure. Taves found that films that were swashbucklers or pirate-themed adventures were often humorous, and that they retained viability even when parodied. Many silent films with action and adventure scenarios flourished in the
silent films of the 1910s and 1920s. These films required elaborate visual effects that were important to displaying menacing or fantastic worlds. These films often took narratives from novels, such as films like
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916) and
The Lost World (1925). Beyond being adaptations of famous books, Tasker said that the appeal of these films was also in their effects laden scene, finding
The Lost World a "landmark of effects-led adventure cinema." Outside technical effects, adventure films of
Douglas Fairbanks such as
Robin Hood (1922) with its scenes of battles and recreations of castles cost a record-setting $1.5 million to produce also provided a variant of adventure spectacle to audiences. Tasker stated that
The Lost World (1925) arguably initiated a jungle adventure film cycle that would be expanded on in the similarly effects driven
sound film King Kong (1933). In her study of
King Kong, Cynthia Erb noted a conventions of both travel documentary and jungle adventure traditions. Tasker wrote that the best known displays of these films were those that focused on the character of
Tarzan which found more significantly commercial success with the success of
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films featuring
Johnny Weissmuller during the decade. Erb found that the jungle imagery of these films of the 1930s frequently showcased the jungle world as frequently alternating between "demonic and
edenic" images, while Tasker said the jungle films and other adventure films of the period would establish a
travelogue allure of these settings as romantic spaces. Within the
Classical Hollywood cinema, one of the major other styles was the historical adventure film. These films were typically set in the past and drew from the Fairbanks films such as
The Black Pirate (1926) and
The Mark of Zorro (1920). They feature violence in a less intense manner than other contemporary genres such as the
Western or
war film. While not specifically associated with one Hollywood studio,
Warner Bros. released a series of popular historical adventures featuring
Errol Flynn such as
Captain Blood (1935),
The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936) and
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938). The historical adventure film continued to be a popular Hollywood genre into the mid-1950s featuring various male stars such as
Tyrone Power,
Douglas Fairbanks Jr.,
Burt Lancaster, and
Stewart Granger.
Imperialism-themed adventure films continued in the 1950s with a greater emphasis on
location shooting. Examples include the box office hit ''
King Solomon's Mines (1950) which was shot in Africa. 1960s fantasy films such as Jason and the Argonauts (1963) combined the set-pieces and fantastic locations of historical adventures with renewed emphasis on special effects. By the 1970s, The Three Musketeers (1973) marked a point where the historical adventure has been firmly associated with what Tasker described as "comic - even camp – tone" that would inform later films such as Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), The Mummy (1999), and Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl'' (2003). Few other films embarked on more serious tones, such as
Ridley Scott's
Gladiator and
Kingdom of Heaven (2005). Since the late 1970s, both action and adventure films have become synonymous with the high-budgeted and profitable Hollywood films and franchises. While both genres took on challenging material, towards the late 1970s of an adventure style geared towards more family-oriented audiences with films like
Star Wars (1977) and
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981).
Star Wars exemplifies a resurgent adventure strand of the 1970s cinema with characters like the
Jedi Knights who swing from ropes and wield light sabers recall sword-fighting and swashbuckling films. Tasker commented that this led to a commercially lucrative and culturally conservative version of the genre that would continue into the 21st century with film series like
The Lord of the Rings,
Harry Potter, and
Pirates of the Caribbean. In their analysis of the genre in 2018,
Johan Höglund and Agnieszka Soltysik Monnet found that the contemporary adventure form often appears in trans-genre work where the adventure component is perceived as secondary. They exemplified that in films such ranging from
Top Gun (1986),
Godzilla (2014), to
Lone Survivor (2013), which range from
fantasy film to
science fiction film to war film genres, all adhere to traditional adventure narratives. ==Critical reception==