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THE preceding chapters have treated of Edison
in various aspects as an inventor, some of which
are familiar to the public, others of which are
believed to be in the nature of a novel
revelation, simply because no one had taken the
trouble before to put the facts together. To
those who have perhaps grown weary of seeing
Edison's name in articles of a sensational
character, it may sound strange to say that,
after all, justice has not been done to his
versatile and many-sided nature; and that the
mere prosaic facts of his actual achievement
outrun the wildest flights of irrelevant
journalistic imagination. Edison hates nothing
more than to be dubbed a genius or played up as a
"wizard"; but this fate has dogged him until
he has come at last to resign himself to it with
a resentful indignation only to be appreciated
when watching him read the latest full-page
Sunday "spread" that develops a casual
conversation into oracular verbosity, and gives
to his shrewd surmise the cast of inspired
prophecy.
In other words, Edison's real work has seldom
been seriously discussed. Rather has it been
taken as a point of departure into a realm of
fancy and romance, where as a relief from
drudgery he is sometimes quite willing to play
the pipe if some one will dance to it. Indeed,
the stories woven around his casual suggestions
are tame and vapid alongside his own essays in
fiction, probably never to be published, but
which show what a real inventor can do when he
cuts loose to create a new heaven and a new
earth, unrestrained by any formal respect for
existing conditions of servitude to three
dimensions and the standard elements.
The present chapter, essentially technical in
its subject-matter, is perhaps as significant
as any in this biography, because it presents
Edison as the Master Impresario of his age,
and maybe of many following ages also. His
phonographs and his motion pictures have more
audiences in a week than all the theatres in
America in a year. The "Nickelodeon" is the
central fact in modern amusement, and Edison
founded it. All that millions know of music and
drama he furnishes; and the whole study of the
theatrical managers thus reaching the masses is
not to ascertain the limitations of the new art,
but to discover its boundless possibilities.
None of the exuberant versions of things Edison
has not done could endure for a moment with the
simple narrative of what he has really done as
the world's new Purveyor of Pleasure. And
yet it all depends on the toilful conquest of a
subtle and intricate art. The story of the
invention of the phonograph has been told. That
of the evolution of motion pictures follows. It
is all one piece of sober, careful analysis,
and stubborn, successful attack on the problem.
The possibility of making a record of animate
movement, and subsequently reproducing it, was
predicted long before the actual accomplishment.
This, as we have seen, was also the case with
the phonograph, the telephone, and the electric
light. As to the phonograph, the prediction
went only so far as the RESULT; the
apparent intricacy of the problem being so great
that the MEANS for accomplishing the desired
end were seemingly beyond the grasp of the
imagination or the mastery of invention.
With the electric light and the telephone the
prediction included not only the result to be
accomplished, but, in a rough and general way,
the mechanism itself; that is to say, long
before a single sound was intelligibly
transmitted it was recognized that such a thing
might be done by causing a diaphragm, vibrated
by original sounds, to communicate its movements
to a distant diaphragm by a suitably controlled
electric current. In the case of the electric
light, the heating of a conductor to
incandescence in a highly rarefied atmosphere was
suggested as a scheme of illumination long before
its actual accomplishment, and in fact before
the production of a suitable generator for
delivering electric current in a satisfactory and
economical manner.
It is a curious fact that while the modern art
of motion pictures depends essentially on the
development of instantaneous photography, the
suggestion of the possibility of securing a
reproduction of animate motion, as well as, in
a general way, of the mechanism for
accomplishing the result, was made many years
before the instantaneous photograph became
possible. While the first motion picture was
not actually produced until the summer of
1889, its real birth was almost a century
earlier, when Plateau, in France,
constructed an optical toy, to which the
impressive name of "Phenakistoscope" was
applied, for producing an illusion of motion.
This toy in turn was the forerunner of the
Zoetrope, or so-called "Wheel of Life,"
which was introduced into this country about the
year 1845. These devices were essentially
toys, depending for their successful operation
(as is the case with motion pictures) upon a
physiological phenomenon known as persistence of
vision. If, for instance, a bright light is
moved rapidly in front of the eye in a dark
room, it appears not as an illuminated spark,
but as a line of fire; a so-called shooting
star, or a flash of lightning produces the same
effect. This result is purely physiological,
and is due to the fact that the retina of the eye
may be considered as practically a sensitized
plate of relatively slow speed, and an image
impressed upon it remains, before being
effaced, for a period of from one-tenth to
one-seventh of a second, varying according to
the idiosyncrasies of the individual and the
intensity of the light. When, therefore, it
is said that we should only believe things we
actually see, we ought to remember that in
almost every instance we never see things as they
are.
Bearing in mind the fact that when an image is
impressed on the human retina it persists for an
appreciable period, varying as stated, with the
individual, and depending also upon the
intensity of the illumination, it will be seen
that, if a number of pictures or photographs are
successively presented to the eye, they will
appear as a single, continuous photo- graph,
provided the periods between them are short
enough to prevent one of the photographs from
being effaced before its successor is presented.
If, for instance, a series of identical
portraits were rapidly presented to the eye, a
single picture would apparently be viewed, or if
we presented to the eye the series of photographs
of a moving object, each one representing a
minute successive phase of the movement, the
movements themselves would apparently again take
place.
With the Zoetrope and similar toys rough
drawings were used for depicting a few broadly
outlined successive phases of movement, because
in their day instantaneous photography was
unknown, and in addition there were certain
crudities of construction that seriously
interfered with the illumination of the
pictures, rendering it necessary to make them
practically as silhouettes on a very conspicuous
background. Hence it will be obvious that these
toys produced merely an ILLUSION of
THEORETICAL motion.
But with the knowledge of even an illusion of
motion, and with the philosophy of persistence
of vision fully understood, it would seem that,
upon the development of instantaneous
photography, the reproduction of ACTUAL
motion by means of pictures would have followed,
almost as a necessary consequence. Yet such was
not the case, and success was ultimately
accomplished by Edison only after persistent
experimenting along lines that could not have
been predicted, including the construction of
apparatus for the purpose, which, if it had not
been made, would undoubtedly be considered
impossible. In fact, if it were not for
Edison's peculiar mentality, that refuses to
recognize anything as impossible until
indubitably demonstrated to be so, the
production of motion pictures would certainly
have been delayed for years, if not for all
time.
One of the earliest suggestions of the
possibility of utilizing photography for
exhibiting the illusion of actual movement was
made by Ducos, who, as early as 1864,
obtained a patent in France, in which he said:
"My invention consists in substituting rapidly
and without confusion to the eye not only of an
individual, but when so desired of a whole
assemblage, the enlarged images of a great
number of pictures when taken instantaneously and
successively at very short intervals.... The
observer will believe that he sees only one
image, which changes gradually by reason of the
successive changes of form and position of the
objects which occur from one picture to the
other. Even supposing that there be a slight
interval of time during which the same object was
not shown, the persistence of the luminous
impression upon the eye will fill this gap.
There will be as it were a living representation
of nature and . . . the same scene will be
reproduced upon the screen with the same degree
of animation.... By means of my apparatus I
am enabled especially to reproduce the passing of
a procession, a review of military manoeuvres,
the movements of a battle, a public fete, a
theatrical scene, the evolution or the dances of
one or of several persons, the changing
expression of countenance, or, if one desires,
the grimaces of a human face; a marine view,
the motion of waves, the passage of clouds in a
stormy sky, particularly in a mountainous
country, the eruption of a volcano," etc.
Other dreamers, contemporaries of Ducos, made
similar suggestions; they recognized the
scientific possibility of the problem, but they
were irretrievably handicapped by the
shortcomings of photography. Even when
substantially instantaneous photographs were
evolved at a somewhat later date they were
limited to the use of wet plates, which have to
be prepared by the photographer and used
immediately, and were therefore quite out of the
question for any practical commercial scheme.
Besides this, the use of plates would have been
impracticable, because the limitations of their
weight and size would have prevented the taking
of a large number of pictures at a high rate of
speed, even if the sensitized surface had been
sufficiently rapid.
Nothing ever came of Ducos' suggestions and
those of the early dreamers in this essentially
practical and commercial art, and their ideas
have made no greater impress upon the final
result than Jules Verne's Nautilus of our
boyhood days has developed the modern submarine.
From time to time further suggestions were
made, some in patents, and others in
photographic and scientific publications, all
dealing with the fascinating thought of
preserving and representing actual scenes and
events. The first serious attempt to secure an
illusion of motion by photography was made in
1878 by Eadward Muybridge as a result of a
wager with the late Senator Leland Stanford,
the California pioneer and horse-lover, who
had asserted, contrary to the usual belief,
that a trotting- horse at one point in its gait
left the ground entirely. At this time wet
plates of very great rapidity were known, and by
arranging a series of cameras along the line of a
track and causing the horse in trotting past
them, by striking wires or strings attached to
the shutters, to actuate the cameras at the
right instant, a series of very clear
instantaneous photographs was obtained. From
these negatives, when developed, positive
prints were made, which were later mounted on a
modified form of Zoetrope and projected upon a
screen.
One of these early exhibitions is described in
the Scientific American of June 5,
1880: "While the separate photographs had
shown the successive positions of a trotting or
running horse in making a single stride, the
Zoogyroscope threw upon the screen apparently
the living animal. Nothing was wanting but the
clatter of hoofs upon the turf, and an
occasional breath of steam from the nostrils, to
make the spectator believe that he had before him
genuine flesh-and-blood steeds. In the views
of hurdle-leaping, the simulation was still
more admirable, even to the motion of the tail
as the animal gathered for the jump, the raising
of his head, all were there. Views of an ox
trotting, a wild bull on the charge, greyhounds
and deer running and birds flying in mid- air
were shown, also athletes in various
positions." It must not be assumed from this
statement that even as late as the work of
Muybridge anything like a true illusion of
movement had been obtained, because such was not
the case. Muybridge secured only one cycle of
movement, because a separate camera had to be
used for each photograph and consequently each
cycle was reproduced over and over again. To
have made photographs of a trotting- horse for
one minute at the moderate rate of twelve per
second would have required, under the Muybridge
scheme, seven hundred and twenty separate
cameras, whereas with the modern art only a
single camera is used. A further defect with
the Muybridge pictures was that since each
photograph was secured when the moving object was
in the centre of the plate, the reproduction
showed the object always centrally on the screen
with its arms or legs in violent movement, but
not making any progress, and with the scenery
rushing wildly across the field of view!
In the early 80's the dry plate was first
introduced into general use, and from that time
onward its rapidity and quality were gradually
improved; so much so that after 1882 Prof.
E. J. Marey, of the French Academy, who
in 1874 had published a well-known treatise
on "Animal Movement," was able by the use of
dry plates to carry forward the experiments of
Muybridge on a greatly refined scale. Marey
was, however, handicapped by reason of the fact
that glass plates were still used, although he
was able with a single camera to obtain twelve
photographs on successive plates in the space of
one second. Marey, like Muybridge,
photographed only one cycle of the movements of a
single object, which was subsequently reproduced
over and over again, and the camera was in the
form of a gun, which could follow the object so
that the successive pictures would be always
located in the centre of the plates.
The review above given, as briefly as
possible, comprises substantially the sum of the
world's knowledge at the time the problem of
recording and reproducing animate movement was
first undertaken by Edison. The most that
could be said of the condition of the art when
Edison entered the field was that it had been
recognized that if a series of instantaneous
photographs of a moving object could be secured
at an enormously high rate many times per
second--they might be passed before the eye
either directly or by projection upon a screen,
and thereby result in a reproduction of the
movements. Two very serious difficulties lay in
the way of actual accomplishment,
however--first, the production of a sensitive
surface in such form and weight as to be capable
of being successively brought into position and
exposed, at the necessarily high rate; and,
second, the production of a camera capable of so
taking the pictures. There were numerous other
workers in the field, but they added nothing to
what had already been proposed. Edison himself
knew nothing of Ducos, or that the suggestions
had advanced beyond the single centrally located
photographs of Muybridge and Marey. As a
matter of public policy, the law presumes that
an inventor must be familiar with all that has
gone before in the field within which he is
working, and if a suggestion is limited to a
patent granted in New South Wales, or is
described in a single publication in Brazil, an
inventor in America, engaged in the same field
of thought, is by legal fiction presumed to have
knowledge not only of the existence of that
patent or publication, but of its contents. We
say this not in the way of an apology for the
extent of Edison's contribution to the
motion-picture art, because there can be no
question that he was as much the creator of that
art as he was of the phonographic art; but to
show that in a practical sense the suggestion of
the art itself was original with him. He
himself says: "In the year 1887 the idea
occurred to me that it was possible to devise an
instrument which should do for the eye what the
phonograph does for the ear, and that by a
combination of the two, all motion and sound
could be recorded and reproduced simultaneously.
This idea, the germ of which came from the
little toy called the Zoetrope and the work of
Muybridge, Marey, and others, has now been
accomplished, so that every change of facial
expression can be recorded and reproduced life-
size. The kinetoscope is only a small model
illustrating the present stage of the progress,
but with each succeeding month new possibilities
are brought into view. I believe that in coming
years, by my own work and that of Dickson,
Muybridge, Marey, and others who will
doubtless enter the field, grand opera can be
given at the Metropolitan Opera House at New
York without any material change from the
original, and with artists and musicians long
since dead."
In the earliest experiments attempts were made
to secure the photographs, reduced
microscopically, arranged spirally on a cylinder
about the size of a phonograph record, and
coated with a highly sensitized surface, the
cylinder being given an intermittent movement,
so as to be at rest during each exposure.
Reproductions were obtained in the same way,
positive prints being observed through a
magnifying glass. Various forms of apparatus
following this general type were made, but they
were all open to the serious objection that the
very rapid emulsions employed were relatively
coarse-grained and prevented the securing of
sharp pictures of microscopic size. On the
other hand, the enlarging of the apparatus to
permit larger pictures to be obtained would
present too much weight to be stopped and started
with the requisite rapidity. In these early
experiments, however, it was recognized that,
to secure proper results, a single camera should
be used, so that the objects might move across
its field just as they move across the field of
the human eye; and the important fact was also
observed that the rate at which persistence of
vision took place represented the minimum speed
at which the pictures should be obtained. If,
for instance, five pictures per second were
taken (half of the time being occupied in
exposure and the other half in moving the exposed
portion of the film out of the field of the lens
and bringing a new portion into its place), and
the same ratio is observed in exhibiting the
pictures, the interval of time between
successive pictures would be one-tenth of a
second; and for a normal eye such an exhibition
would present a substantially continuous
photograph. If the angular movement of the
object across the field is very slow, as, for
instance, a distant vessel, the successive
positions of the object are so nearly coincident
that when reproduced before the eye an impression
of smooth, continuous movement is secured.
If, how- ever, the object is moving rapidly
across the field of view, one picture will be
separated from its successor to a marked extent,
and the resulting impression will be jerky and
unnatural. Recognizing this fact, Edison
always sought for a very high speed, so as to
give smooth and natural reproductions, and even
with his experimental apparatus obtained upward
of forty- eight pictures per second, whereas,
in practice, at the present time, the accepted
rate varies between twenty and thirty per
second. In the efforts of the present day to
economize space by using a minimum length of
film, pictures are frequently taken at too slow
a rate, and the reproductions are therefore
often objectionable, by reason of more or less
jerkiness.
During the experimental period and up to the
early part of 1889, the kodak film was being
slowly developed by the Eastman Kodak
Company. Edison perceived in this product the
solution of the problem on which he had been
working, because the film presented a very light
body of tough material on which relatively large
photographs could be taken at rapid intervals.
The surface, however, was not at first
sufficiently sensitive to admit of sharply
defined pictures being secured at the necessarily
high rates. It seemed apparent, therefore,
that in order to obtain the desired speed there
would have to be sacrificed that fineness of
emulsion necessary for the securing of sharp
pictures. But as was subsequently seen, this
sacrifice was in time rendered unnecessary.
Much credit is due the Eastman
experts--stimulated and encouraged by Edison,
but independently of him--for the production at
last of a highly sensitized, fine-grained
emulsion presenting the highly sensitized surface
that Edison sought.
Having at last obtained apparently the proper
material upon which to secure the photographs,
the problem then remained to devise an apparatus
by means of which from twenty to forty pictures
per second could be taken; the film being
stationary during the exposure and, upon the
closing of the shutter, being moved to present a
fresh surface. In connection with this problem
it is interesting to note that this question of
high speed was apparently regarded by all
Edison's predecessors as the crucial point.
Ducos, for example, expended a great deal of
useless ingenuity in devising a camera by means
of which a tape-line film could receive the
photographs while being in continuous movement,
necessitating the use of a series of moving
lenses. Another experimenter, Dumont, made
use of a single large plate and a great number of
lenses which were successively exposed.
Muybridge, as we have seen, used a series of
cameras, one for each plate. Marey was limited
to a very few photographs, because the entire
surface had to be stopped and started in
connection with each exposure.
After the accomplishment of the fact, it would
seem to be the obvious thing to use a single lens
and move the sensitized film with respect to it,
intermittently bringing the surface to rest,
then exposing it, then cutting off the light and
moving the surface to a fresh position; but
who, other than Edison, would assume that such
a device could be made to repeat these movements
over and over again at the rate of twenty to
forty per second? Users of kodaks and other
forms of film cameras will appreciate perhaps
better than others the difficulties of the
problem, because in their work, after an
exposure, they have to advance the film forward
painfully to the extent of the next picture
before another exposure can take place, these
operations permitting of speeds of but a few
pictures per minute at best. Edison's solution
of the problem involved the production of a kodak
in which from twenty to forty pictures should be
taken IN EACH SECOND, and with such
fineness of adjustment that each should exactly
coincide with its predecessors even when
subjected to the test of enlargement by
projection. This, however, was finally
accomplished, and in the summer of 1889 the
first modern motion- picture camera was made.
More than this, the mechanism for operating the
film was so constructed that the movement of the
film took place in one- tenth of the time
required for the exposure, giving the film an
opportunity to come to rest prior to the opening
of the shutter. From that day to this the
Edison camera has been the accepted standard for
securing pictures of objects in motion, and such
changes as have been made in it have been purely
in the nature of detail mechanical refinements.
The earliest form of exhibiting apparatus,
known as the Kinetoscope, was a machine in
which a positive print from the negative obtained
in the camera was exhibited directly to the eye
through a peep- hole; but in 1895 the films
were applied to modified forms of magic
lanterns, by which the images are projected upon
a screen. Since that date the industry has
developed very rapidly, and at the present time
(1910) all of the principal American
manufacturers of motion pictures are paying a
royalty to Edison under his basic patents.
From the early days of pictures representing
simple movements, such as a man sneezing, or a
skirt-dance, there has been a gradual
evolution, until now the pictures represent not
only actual events in all their palpitating
instantaneity, but highly developed dramas and
scenarios enacted in large, well-equipped glass
studios, and the result of infinite pains and
expense of production. These pictures are
exhibited in upward of eight thousand places of
amusement in the United States, and are
witnessed by millions of people each year. They
constitute a cheap, clean form of amusement for
many persons who cannot spare the money to go to
the ordinary theatres, or they may be exhibited
in towns that are too small to support a
theatre. More than this, they offer to the
poor man an effective substitute for the saloon.
Probably no invention ever made has afforded
more pleasure and entertainment than the motion
picture.
Aside from the development of the motion picture
as a spectacle, there has gone on an evolution
in its use for educational purposes of wide
range, which must not be overlooked. In fact,
this form of utilization has been carried further
in Europe than in this country as a means of
demonstration in the arts and sciences. One may
study animal life, watch a surgical operation,
follow the movement of machinery, take lessons
in facial expression or in calisthenics. It
seems a pity that in motion pictures should at
last have been found the only competition that
the ancient marionettes cannot withstand. But
aside from the disappearance of those
entertaining puppets, all else is gain in the
creation of this new art.
The work at the Edison laboratory in the
development of the motion picture was as usual
intense and concentrated, and, as might be
expected, many of the early experiments were
quite primitive in their character until command
had been secured of relatively perfect
apparatus. The subjects registered jerkily by
the films were crude and amusing, such as of
Fred Ott's sneeze, Carmencita dancing,
Italians and their performing bears, fencing,
trapeze stunts, horsemanship,
blacksmithing--just simple movements without
any attempt to portray the silent drama. One
curious incident of this early study occurred
when "Jim" Corbett was asked to box a few
rounds in front of the camera, with a "dark
un" to be selected locally. This was agreed
to, and a celebrated bruiser was brought over
from Newark. When this "sparring partner"
came to face Corbett in the imitation ring he
was so paralyzed with terror he could hardly
move. It was just after Corbett had won one of
his big battles as a prize-fighter, and the
dismay of his opponent was excusable. The
"boys" at the laboratory still laugh consumedly
when they tell about it.
The first motion-picture studio was dubbed by
the staff the "Black Maria." It was an
unpretentious oblong wooden structure erected in
the laboratory yard, and had a movable roof in
the central part. This roof could be raised or
lowered at will. The building was covered with
black roofing paper, and was also painted black
inside. There was no scenery to render gay this
lugubrious environment, but the black interior
served as the common background for the
performers, throwing all their actions into high
relief. The whole structure was set on a pivot
so that it could be swung around with the sun;
and the movable roof was opened so that the
accentuating sunlight could stream in upon the
actor whose gesticulations were being caught by
the camera. These beginnings and crudities are
very remote from the elaborate and expensive
paraphernalia and machinery with which the art is
furnished to-day.
At the present time the studios in which motion
pictures are taken are expensive and pretentious
affairs. An immense building of glass, with
all the properties and stage-settings of a
regular theatre, is required. The Bronx Park
studio of the Edison company cost at least one
hundred thousand dollars, while the well-known
house of Pathe Freres in France--one of
Edison's licensees--makes use of no fewer
than seven of these glass theatres. All of the
larger producers of pictures in this country and
abroad employ regular stock companies of actors,
men and women selected especially for their skill
in pantomime, although, as most observers have
perhaps suspected, in the actual taking of the
pictures the performers are required to carry on
an animated and prepared dialogue with the same
spirit and animation as on the regular stage.
Before setting out on the preparation of a
picture, the book is first written --known in
the business as a scenario--giving a complete
statement as to the scenery, drops and
background, and the sequence of events, divided
into scenes as in an ordinary play. These are
placed in the hands of a "producer,"
corresponding to a stage- director, generally
an actor or theatrical man of experience, with a
highly developed dramatic instinct. The various
actors are selected, parts are assigned, and
the scene-painters are set to work on the
production of the desired scenery. Before the
photographing of a scene, a long series of
rehearsals takes place, the incidents being gone
over and over again until the actors are "letter
perfect." So persistent are the producers in
the matter of rehearsals and the refining and
elaboration of details, that frequently a
picture that may be actually photographed and
reproduced in fifteen minutes, may require two
or three weeks for its production. After the
rehearsal of a scene has advanced sufficiently to
suit the critical requirements of the producer,
the camera man is in requisition, and he is
consulted as to lighting so as to produce the
required photographic effect. Preferably, of
course, sunlight is used whenever possible,
hence the glass studios; but on dark days, and
when night-work is necessary, artificial light
of enormous candle-power is used, either
mercury arcs or ordinary arc lights of great size
and number.
Under all conditions the light is properly
screened and diffused to suit the critical eye of
the camera man. All being in readiness, the
actual picture is taken, the actors going
through their rehearsed parts, the producer
standing out of the range of the camera, and
with a megaphone to his lips yelling out his
instructions, imprecations, and approval, and
the camera man grinding at the crank of the
camera and securing the pictures at the rate of
twenty or more per second, making a faithful and
permanent record of every movement and every
change of facial expression. At the end of the
scene the negative is developed in the ordinary
way, and is then ready for use in the printing
of the positives for sale. When a further scene
in the play takes place in the same setting, and
without regard to its position in the plot, it
is taken up, rehearsed, and photographed in the
same way, and afterward all the scenes are
cemented together in the proper sequence, and
form the complete negative. Frequently,
therefore, in the production of a
motion-picture play, the first and the last
scene may be taken successively, the only thing
necessary being, of course, that after all is
done the various scenes should be arranged in
their proper order. The frames, having served
their purpose, now go back to the scene-painter
for further use. All pictures are not taken in
studios, because when light and weather permit
and proper surroundings can be secured outside,
scenes can best be obtained with natural
scenery--city streets, woods, and fields.
The great drawback to the taking of pictures
out-of-doors, however, is the inevitable
crowd, attracted by the novelty of the
proceedings, which makes the camera man's life
a torment by getting into the field of his
instrument. The crowds are patient, however,
and in one Edison picture involving the blowing
up of a bridge by the villain of the piece and
the substitution of a pontoon bridge by a company
of engineers just in time to allow the heroine to
pass over in her automobile, more than a
thousand people stood around for almost an entire
day waiting for the tedious rehearsals to end and
the actual performance to begin. Frequently
large bodies of men are used in pictures, such
as troops of soldiers, and it is an open secret
that for weeks during the Boer War regularly
equipped British and Boer armies confronted
each other on the peaceful hills of Orange,
New Jersey, ready to enact before the camera
the stirring events told by the cable from the
seat of hostilities. These conflicts were
essentially harmless, except in one case during
the battle of Spion Kopje, when "General
Cronje," in his efforts to fire a wooden
cannon, inadvertently dropped his fuse into a
large glass bottle containing gunpowder. The
effect was certainly most dramatic, and created
great enthusiasm among the many audiences which
viewed the completed production; but the
unfortunate general, who is still an employee,
was taken to the hospital, and even now, twelve
years afterward, he says with a grin that
whenever he has a moment of leisure he takes the
time to pick a few pieces of glass from his
person!
Edison's great contribution to the regular
stage was the incandescent electric lamp, which
enabled the production of scenic effects never
before even dreamed of, but which we accept now
with so much complacency. Yet with the motion
picture, effects are secured that could not be
reproduced to the slightest extent on the real
stage. The villain, overcome by a remorseful
conscience, sees on the wall of the room the
very crime which he committed, with
HIMSELF as the principal actor; one of
the easy effects of double exposure. The
substantial and ofttimes corpulent ghost or
spirit of the real stage has been succeeded by an
intangible wraith, as transparent and
unsubstantial as may be demanded in the best book
of fairy tales--more double exposure. A man
emerges from the water with a splash, ascends
feet foremost ten yards or more, makes a
graceful curve and lands on a spring-board,
runs down it to the bank, and his clothes fly
gently up from the ground and enclose his
person--all unthinkable in real life, but
readily possible by running the motion-picture
film backward! The fairy prince commands the
princess to appear, consigns the bad brothers to
instant annihilation, turns the witch into a
cat, confers life on inanimate things; and many
more startling and apparently incomprehensible
effects are carried out with actual reality, by
stop-work photography. In one case, when the
command for the heroine to come forth is given,
the camera is stopped, the young woman walks to
the desired spot, and the camera is again
started; the effect to the eye--not knowing of
this little by-play--is as if she had
instantly appeared from space. The other
effects are perhaps obvious, and the field and
opportunities are absolutely unlimited. Other
curious effects are secured by taking the
pictures at a different speed from that at which
they are exhibited. If, for example, a scene
occupying thirty seconds is reproduced in ten
seconds, the movements will be three times as
fast, and vice versa. Many scenes familiar to
the reader, showing automobiles tearing along
the road and rounding corners at an apparently
reckless speed, are really pictures of slow and
dignified movements reproduced at a high speed.
Brief reference has been made to motion pictures
of educational subjects, and in this field there
are very great opportunities for development.
The study of geography, scenes and incidents in
foreign countries, showing the lives and customs
and surroundings of other peoples, is obviously
more entertaining to the child when actively
depicted on the screen than when merely described
in words. The lives of great men, the enacting
of important historical events, the reproduction
of great works of literature, if visually
presented to the child must necessarily impress
his mind with greater force than if shown by mere
words. We predict that the time is not far
distant when, in many of our public schools,
two or three hours a week will be devoted to this
rational and effective form of education.
By applying microphotography to motion pictures
an additional field is opened up, one phase of
which may be the study of germ life and
bacteria, so that our future medical students
may become as familiar with the habits and
customs of the Anthrax bacillus, for example,
as of the domestic cat.
From whatever point of view the subject is
approached, the fact remains that in the motion
picture, perhaps more than with any other
invention, Edison has created an art that must
always make a special appeal to the mind and
emotions of men, and although so far it has not
advanced much beyond the field of amusement, it
contains enormous possibilities for serious
development in the future. Let us not think too
lightly of the humble five-cent theatre with its
gaping crowd following with breathless interest
the vicissitudes of the beautiful heroine.
Before us lies an undeveloped land of
opportunity which is destined to play an
important part in the growth and welfare of the
human race.
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