Robert W. Paul
Рождение : 1869-10-04, Highbury, London, England, UK
Смерть : 1943-03-28
История
Robert William Paul (3 October 1869 – 28 March 1943) was an English pioneer of film and scientific instrument maker.
He made narrative films as early as April 1895. Those films were shown first in Edison Kinescope knockoffs. In 1896 he showed them projected. That was about the time the Lumière brothers were pioneering projected films in France.
His first notably successful scientic device was his Unipivot galvanometer.
In 1999 the British film industry erected a commemorative plaque on his building at 44 Hatton Garden, London.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Producer
A short documentary about industrial whaling. The surviving footage runs for approximately 12 minutes.
Cinematography
Short documentary released in 1907.
Producer
Short documentary released in 1907.
Director of Photography
A magical glowing white motorcar ignores policemen, drives up buildings, flies through outer space, and can transform into a horse and carriage.
Producer
A magical glowing white motorcar ignores policemen, drives up buildings, flies through outer space, and can transform into a horse and carriage.
Producer
Animated film featuring the hand of Walter R. Booth drawing a coster and his donah who come to life and dance. The hand then crumples up the paper and dispenses it in the form of confetti. (BFI)
Director
Director
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An anarchist blows up the general who sent his wife to Siberia.
Director
Early comedic chase film from Robert W. Paul.
Producer
A husband rushes for a doctor and his wife has triplets.
Director
A barmaid plies a swell with smiles and with cherries from a box that's just been delivered. When she refuses a cherry to a roughly-dressed tradesman who runs a tab at the bar, he pays off his debt in a huff, using all his week's pay. He then storms penniless and without provisions into his ill-furnished house where his wife and two children, ill-clad and ill-fed, cower. Is there any hope for him and for his family? If he does realize how low he's sunk, what help is there to lift him up? Will the family ever know the taste of cherries?
Producer
A boy pulls a prank on his poor old mother.
Producer
A man and a woman talk beside a street near a corner where a cop stands. Just as a horse-drawn cart rounds the corner, the man backs off the sidewalk saying good-by to his companion. The horse and cart flatten him and continue on, out of the camera's stationary range. The cop runs after the cab, the woman dashes to the body. The cop brings back the driver; is the victim dead?
Producer
Director
A man and a woman talk beside a street near a corner where a cop stands. Just as a horse-drawn cart rounds the corner, the man backs off the sidewalk saying good-by to his companion. The horse and cart flatten him and continue on, out of the camera's stationary range. The cop runs after the cab, the woman dashes to the body. The cop brings back the driver; is the victim dead?
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
A convict escapes from Portland Quarry and is caught in the woods by bloodhounds from Radnage kennels.
Producer
Director
Director
A panorama shot of the Norwegian town and harbour of Hammerfest. Believed to be the earliest surviving film of Norway.
Producer
A panorama shot of the Norwegian town and harbour of Hammerfest. Believed to be the earliest surviving film of Norway.
Director
A stationary camera looks on as two dapper gents play a game of chess. One drinks and smokes, and when he looks away, his opponent moves two pieces. A fight ensues, first with the squirting of a seltzer bottle, then with fisticuffs. The combatants wrestle each other to the floor and continue the fight out of the camera's view, hidden by the table. The waiter arrives to haul both of them out.
Producer
A Swiss tourist knocks the head off a negro waiter. (IMDb)
Producer
Producer
Filmed in 35mm and in black and white, this short silent film was produced by the English film pioneer R. W. Paul, and directed by Walter R. Booth and was filmed at Paul's Animatograph Works. It was released in November 1901. As was common in cinema's early days, the filmmakers chose to adapt an already well-known story, in this case A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, in the belief that the audience's familiarity with the story would result in the need for fewer intertitles. It was presented in 'Twelve Tableaux' or scenes. The film contains the first use of intertitles in a film.
Producer
The Waif and the Wizard features the same young man who appeared in Undressing Extraordinary (and who might be early filmmaker Walter Booth). It's another early example of a two-shot film along the lines of Paul's earlier film Come Along Do!. The young man plays a magician who, after completing his act, agrees to go home with the young boy from the audience who helped him perform his tricks. At the boy's home he finds a sick sister and a worried mother being threatened with eviction by her landlord.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Producer
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.
Director
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.
Producer
An old proprietor is startled and haunted by the strange happenings inside his curiosity shop.
Producer
The famous acrobats in the above title appear in a marvellous acrobatic act. There are three barrels arranged on the stage. The boys, blindfolded, stand on opposite sides of the stage, and jump from one barrel into the other until they both land in the same barrel at the same time. They then jump backwards onto the stage over the two barrels. One table is then mounted upon another and the center barrel is placed on top. The brothers still blindfolded jump one each into a barrel and from them to the first to the second table and from the second table into the barrel on top of the second table. They then jump backwards onto the stage. This is pronounced by show people to be the most marvellous acrobatic feat that has ever been introduced. (Edison Catalog)
Producer
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)
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Producer
Producer
Producer
Producer
Director
Producer
Producer
A magician performs tricks. First with a top hat, then with his audience.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Producer
Director
Producer
Producer
Producer
A soldier and a serving-girl are courting on a bench. A fat old lady sits on the bench, interrupting them.
Director
A soldier and a serving-girl are courting on a bench. A fat old lady sits on the bench, interrupting them.
Producer
Four men of different ranks play a game of tetherball on a ship's deck.
Director
Four men of different ranks play a game of tetherball on a ship's deck.
Director
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.
Producer
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 forty-some seconds have 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.
Director
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 forty-some seconds have 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.
Director of Photography
The festive start and disastrous aftermath of the launch of the H.M.S. Albion.
Director
The festive start and disastrous aftermath of the launch of the H.M.S. Albion.
Director
Producer
A series of actuality films showing the procession to mark Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee.
Director
A series of actuality films showing the procession to mark Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee.
Director
Robert W. Paul production, "The Vanishing Lady", 1897. Man in roman costume carves figure of girl in doorway. As he finishes, the statue comes to life. The man expresses great love and desire for her, but every time the man goes to grab the girl she vanishes and reappears somewhere else.
Director
Wire-walker performs on woman's clothesline.
Producer
A playful variation on A Soldier's Courtship, producer Robert W. Paul's smash hit from the previous year, this film spies on a young man trying to tease a kiss from a young girl doing the washing at a tub. For his efforts, the man receives a dunking in the tub himself and much hilarity follows. (IMDb)
Producer
Producer
Producer
A robber forces a luckless stroller in the park to remove his hat, coat, waistcoat and trousers.
Director
A robber forces a luckless stroller in the park to remove his hat, coat, waistcoat and trousers.
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Producer
The water beats relentlessly against the Hell's Mouth (Boca do Inferno), one of the main natural attractions of Lisbon's west coast, filmed from above almost in a vertical plunge onto the deep, rocky ground.
Director
Seen but not heard? Three children get up to mischief after their mother puts them to bed in this Victorian entertainment. This was one of numerous variations on the theme of 'naughty little boys or girls' in film's early years, demonstrating that Victorian ideals of child discipline didn't always match the reality.
Producer
Husband comes home late and wakes the wife. Based on a popular stage play.
Director
Director
A baby falls into the river
Producer
'The White Eyed Kaffir' performs with top hat.
Producer
Brighton. Landing of party from small boat with comic incidents.
Producer
Britain's first drama (i.e. non documentary) film.
Director
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
Directed by Robert W. Paul.
Director
A wife dismisses a maid she hired when she finds her husband flirting with her. Allegedly the first film to ever use intertitles.
Cinematography
Poor pedestrian, horse drawn carts, wagons and bus travel across bridge at Sunderland, Tyne and Wear.
Producer
Poor pedestrian, horse drawn carts, wagons and bus travel across bridge at Sunderland, Tyne and Wear.
Director
Shot by Georges Demenÿ.
Director
Three athletes make their way to wicker baskets that contain a mishmash of wacky costumes. They need to dress up as quickly as they can, and make their way back on the running track.
Director
Director
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Director
R.W. Paul's early footage showing the new Blackfriars Bridge. It had been opened by Queen Victoria in 1869 for both road and rail, and showcases the distinctive Venetian Gothic ironwork.
Producer
The opening of the Kiel Canal in Germany by Kaiser Wilhelm II on 20 June 1895.
Producer
The surf pounds against a breakwater on which are visible several people standing. The wall looks to be about 20 feet above sea level and extend at least 100 feet into the water. A large wave rolls picturesquely along the wall toward the shore. Smaller waves follow. Then the scene changes to river water flowing. We see both shores: in the foreground a log and tree branch are visible; on the far shore, there appears to be a low wall with trees beyond it. The camera is stationary in both shots.
Director
A man strolling in a city street is attacked by three assailants. A policeman comes to the rescue and the men struggle with each other.
Producer
Incident at Clovelly Cottage, also known as Incident Outside Clovelly Cottage, Barnet, shot by Birt Acres and produced by Acres and his collaborator Robert W. Paul in March 1895, was the "first successful motion picture film made in Britain"
Considered lost since only a few frames have survived.