08 October 2009

Before the Nickelodeon - The Early Cinema of Edwin S. Porter
















 



Title: Before the Nickelodeon - The Early Cinema of Edwin Porter
Directed by: Charles Musser
Narrated by: Blanche Sweet
IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083633/
My Rating: (5/10) ★★★★★✩✩✩✩✩

What I knew about Edwin Porter before watching this documentary: He was an incredibly prolific director--one of the first--who worked for Edison's company. He had a knack for film editing and helped to establish the narrative structure we are familiar with today through innovations in parallel editing. I also knew that, like Melies, he grew terribly out of fashion way before he was ready to put down the camera, and thereby lost not only his fortune but also his street cred.

As I'm kind of hovering at about 1906 in this film adventure of mine, I decided to pick up this documentary to sort of get a feel for Edwin Porter the gentleman. The innovator. 1906 was around about the time that people were starting to develop incredible technique, and Edwin Porter started to get left behind simply by over-utilizing the very tricks he created. People were tired of them and wanted more. This documentary includes an incredibly sad review of one of his later films Rescued From An Eagle's Nest where the New York Post (I believe) literally tears him to shreds.

Aside from this one moment, this doc does not really delve too deeply into Porter's life. But what this documentary lacks in detail, it tries to makes up for in the quality of print restoration for some of his more obscure films...particularly Rescued From An Eagle's Nest & Jack and the Beanstalk (which before it begins includes a set of sketches that, if they're indeed Porter's, are as INCREDIBLE a look into his process as Guillermo del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth sketches).

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