Product Tag - Robert W. Paul

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    Come Along, Do! (1898)

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    Come Along, Do! (1898)

    Come Along, Do! is an 1898 British short silent comedy film, produced and directed by Robert W. Paul. The film was of 1 minute duration, but only 38 seconds has survived. The whole of the second shot is only available as film stills. The film features an elderly man at an art gallery who takes a great interest in a nude statue to the irritation of his wife. The film has cinematographic significance as the first example of film continuity. It was, according to Michael Brooke of BFI Screenonline, “one of the first films to feature more than one shot.” In the first shot, an elderly couple is outside an art exhibition having lunch and then follow other people inside through the door. The second shot shows what they do inside.

    $25.00
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    A Switchback Railway (1898)

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    A Switchback Railway (1898)

    The Switchback Railway was the forerunner of the roller coaster. Passengers sit in a small car which trundles up a swooping railway track then performs a 180 degree turn at its summit before swooping back down on a parallel track.

    $25.00
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    A Railway Collision (1900)

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    A Railway Collision (1900)

    The scene is a railroad track on the side of a steep mountain, with a tunnel in the background, toward which a train is running at a high rate of speed. At this instant the audience is appalled at the sight of a second train rushing out of the tunnel. Both trains are on the same track and traveling toward each other at a high rate of speed. They collide. Cars and engines are smashed into fragments and thrown down the steep incline. (Edison Catalog)

    $25.00
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    The Countryman and the Cinematograph (1901)

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    The Countryman and the Cinematograph (1901)

    A satire on the way that audiences unaccustomed to the cinema didn’t know how to react to the moving images on a screen – in this film, an unsophisticated (and stereotypical) country yokel is alternately baffled and terrified, in the latter case by the apparent approach of a steam train.

    $25.00
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    The Cheese Mites, or Lilliputians in a London Restaurant (1901)

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    The Cheese Mites, or Lilliputians in a London Restaurant (1901)

    A jovial looking man is seated nearest the window of a restaurant. He has just finished his meal and the waiter brings a glass of beer, and when he places the glass upon the table, lo, a little sailor boy about six inches high appears from the foam, and climbing down the side of the glass, proceeds to dance a sailor’s hornpipe on the table.

    $25.00
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    Is Spiritualism a Fraud? (1906)

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    Is Spiritualism a Fraud? (1906)

    Men expose a fake medium’s tricks and take revenge.

    $25.00
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