San Francisco Public Library

The European pioneers, Kino International ; a production of Film Preservation Associates and the British Film Institute ; produced for video by Heather Stewart

Label
The European pioneers, Kino International ; a production of Film Preservation Associates and the British Film Institute ; produced for video by Heather Stewart
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Main title
The European pioneers
Medium
videorecording
Oclc number
49394628
Responsibility statement
Kino International ; a production of Film Preservation Associates and the British Film Institute ; produced for video by Heather Stewart
Runtime
58
Series statement
Movies begin : a treasury of early cinema, 1894-1913, v. 2
Summary
A collection of early motion picture films from Europe, including works by Auguste and Louis Lumière, Robert W. Paul, George Albert Smith, James Bamforth & James A. Williamson"While some may consider the cinema a distinctly American invention, the most influential figures during its infancy were two brothers in France: Auguste and Louis Lumière. In the beginning, they dominated world film production and distribution. Through the magic of cinema, such ordinary sights as the demolition of a wall, the arrival of a train, a family enjoying breakfast or workers exiting a factory were transformed into mystifying spectacles of light and motion, having their premiere on December 28, 1895. Perhaps the most extraordinary elements of this collection are the early British films, virtually unseen in the United States. Robert W. Paul, a scientific instrument maker by trade, devoted fifteen years to motion pictures, designing his own camera and projector and, in March 1896, staging the first performance by an Englishman of projected motion pictures to a fee-paying public. Paul's works range from Lumière-influenced actualities to experiments with stop-motion (Extraordinary Cab Accident, 1903) and miniature effects (The Motorist, 1906, made with Walter R. Booth). Other inventive artists represented herein include George Albert Smith, a well known scientific lecturer of the day; Walter Haggar and sons, who exhibited their films in a traveling tent show; Frank Mottershaw of the Sheffield Photographic Company; James Bamforth, also a manufacturer of lantern slides and picture postcards; and James Williamson, whose 1901 short Stop Thief! is considered the source of the subsequent development of the chase film."--Publisher
Technique
live action
Classification
resource.authorofafterwordcolophonetc
resource.commentator
Composer
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