SEE
FILMS
SHOP FOR
FILMS
LEARN ABOUT
FILMS
RESEARCH
FILMS
DOWNLOAD
FILMS
about BFI
what's on
film & tv info
national archive
publications
join the BFI
BFI Filmstore
>
DVDs
>
Early & Silent Cinema
>
Before the Nickelodeon
Information
Home
Latest BFI Products
Best Sellers
Offers & Promotions
BFI Member Discounts
Visit the Filmstore
Filmstore Events
Certification
Products
Blu-ray
Artists' Film & Video
British & Irish Film & TV
Italy
Books & Magazines
Africa
Animation
Artists' Film & Video
BFI Classics
BFI Events & Film Seasons
British & Irish Film & TV
China, Hong-Kong, Taiwan
Documentary
Early & Silent Cinema
Eastern Europe & Balkans
Film Posters
Film Theory & Analysis
Filmmakers
France
Gender Studies
Genre
Germany & Austria
India & South Asia
Industry
Latin America
Magazines & Journals
Middle East
Projecting and Archiving
Reference
Scandinavia
Short Film
Sound & Music
South Korea
Stationery
Television & Media
Toys, games & novelty items
US & Canadian Cinema
World Cinema
DVDs non BFI
Artists' Film & Video
DVDs
Africa
Animation
Artists' Film & Video
Belgium & Netherlands
British & Irish Film & TV
British Transport Films
China, Hong-Kong, Taiwan
Documentary
Early & Silent Cinema
France
Genre
Germany & Austria
India & South Asia
Italy
Japan
Middle East
Russia
Scandinavia
South East Asia
Spain
US & Canadian Cinema
Education Resources
Student Resources
Teaching Resources
Gifts
Clothing and accessories
Film Posters
Homewares
Stationery
Toys, games & novelty items
Sale & Promotions
British & Irish Film & TV
Certificate
1982
Black & White and tinted
USA
Language(s): With English Narration
Published/distributed by BFI
ISBN/EAN: 503567300577
Ratio 1.66:1
Region 2
Price: £15.65
(Including VAT at 15%)
<back
Before the Nickelodeon
Musser, Charles
Before the Nickelodeon, an award-winning and intricately detailed documentary on the genesis of early cinema, focuses on one of the craft's most ingenious pioneers: Edwin S Porter. The film is based on the research of the leading scholar of early American film, Charles Musser, who also co-wrote and directed it.
Edwin S Porter (1870-1941), director, cinematographer and cameraman was America's pre-eminent filmmaker before dramatic artistry in film construction became a necessity. He was a product of a system that was emerging out of the years of invention and would feed the thousands of nickelodeons, or cheap cinemas, which mushroomed across American from 1907. For Porter and his kind it was a technician's approach, putting together the pieces of what would succeed as narrative cinema, in the same way as the inventors of cinema's technology had learned how to put motion pictures before an audience. Having played his part, he was naturally succeeded by D W Griffith and his contemporaries, who built upon this template, replacing efficiency with poetry.
As narrator Blanche Sweet (one of D W Griffith's Biograph starlets) acknowledges, to study Porter's fortunes is to witness the emergence of the American cinema industry and Before the Nickelodeon charts Porter's illustrious career from telephone operator to projectionist and finally prestigious film director.
Porter made over 200 films between 1901 and 1908. His work is often held up as a precursor to Griffith's The Birth of a Nation in establishing the structure and codes of cinematic language and classic filmmaking (Griffith even makes a star appearance in Porter's Rescued from an Eagle's Nest (1908) featured here).
Before the Nickelodeon includes excerpts from the hugely popular and imaginative Life of an American Fireman (1903), Jack and the Beanstalk (1902) and Porter's finest, The Great Train Robbery (1903).
First shown at the New York Film Festival in October 1982, it was complemented in 1991 by Musser's exhaustive book Before the Nickelodeon: Edwin S Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company (University of California Press).
Extras
* Illustrated booklet with an introduction
* Credits and biographies of Edwin S Porter, Charles Musser and Blanche Sweet
Contact us
|
Site map
|
Terms & Conditions
|
Privacy
|
Security
|
Postage, Delivery & VAT
website by Green Jersey