The Facts:
U.S. (Edison) 12m Silent BW (hand-colored)
Director: Edwin S. Porter
Screenplay: Scott Marble, Edwin S. Porter
Photography: Edwin S. Porter, Blair Smith
Cast: A.C. Abadie, Gilbert M. "Bronco Billy" Anderson, George Barnes, Walter Cameron, Frank Hanaway, Morgan Jones, Tom London, Marie Murray, Mary Show
The Great Train Robbery is among one of the first western movies. (By the way did you know Thomas Edison made a film in 1899 called Cripple Creek Bar-Room Scene, which could be considered the first Western film. Cool right?)
I have to say, I've been very pleased with this book so far. I imagined it would be mostly boring films in which had no relevance to my life. But so far, I have seen the beginnings of two film genres. Best decision of the month!
Any who, I found this film on YouTube again. I think there might be a few missing shots, but I get the gist.
Something interesting my sister pointed out was that early silent films rely heavily on assumption. Obviously since there isn't sound, character development is harder to gauge. In a silent film the guy who looks like the bad guy has to be the bad guy. There is not a lot of room for ambiguity. Nowadays we have heros who look like the bad guys but are really the good guys. In silent films there is only black and white (I mean that figuratively). There are no gray areas in silent film. I think one thing I like about modern film is character development. As a writer, I try to give my characters a lot of depth because, ultimately, stories are about people. As my sister said this film is mostly about "what" is happening rather than "why".
Stats: 2/1001
Rating: 5/10