Birth of the Flicks

by ricknight | December 28, 2007 at 10:21 am | 443 views | 4 comments
On this day in 1895, Auguste and Louis Lumiere demonstrated the first movie projector, the cinematographe, in Paris, France. It projected its images out onto a screen, unlike Thomas Edison's kinetograph, which was a peep show that the viewer looked into, and it weighed only 20 pounds compared to Edison's half-ton invention. The first film they showed was "Workers Leaving the Lumiere Factory." The movie opened with a concierge unlocking the gates, showed people walking through, and ended with the concierge closing the gates again. They made more than 2,000 films like this, without plots or characters, and thought of them just as moving pictures, and despite the thousands of people who lined up at their viewings every night, the Lumieres thought that movies would be a passing fad and Auguste went off to school to become a medical scientist, and Louis went back to working on still photographs.


And we still line up by the thousands to watch...

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Rob Walker
good stuff:

thanks ricknight, interesting stuff!

ricknight

Many thanks for the additional footage!

Cheers
Ric

Mickelodeon

Mickelodeon has contributed a photo to this story.

Mickelodeon

After years of being a fan of old movies, I've taken one step backwards in history and find myself enamored of silent films over the last few months. This is something I attribute to my dislike of CGI and super-flashy special effects in general...

Ironically enough, I don't mind the super-flashy special effects on television. 

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December 28, 2007 at 10:21 am by ricknight, 443 views, 4 comments

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