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Scott Lord Silent Film: The Great Train Robbery (Porter,1903)

Scott Lord Silent Film: The Great Train Robbery (Porter,1903)
Vladimir Petric in A Visual/Analytical History of Silent Film (1895-1930), Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, notes Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" as a "primitive use of parralel editing to dramatize the narrative". Not only is this in sharp contrast to the earlier cinema of attractions that relegated storytelling to the act of display, but the film is significant as the first film made in the Western genre. It is uncanny that the closing shot, as a subjective shot, is an attraction, something static and something dispalyed, urging the spectatator to draw and shoot back. Silent Film Silent Film


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Scott Lord Silent Film: The Great Train Robbery (Porter,1903)

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