Cinema’s First Two Motion Pictures

11/21/2007
French inventor Louis Le Prince (1841-1890) is
considered by many to be the inventor of the motion
picture camera;

and he has been credited with shooting Cinema's
first experimental motion pictures

Le Prince, however, is a relatively unknown figure;
cultural sociologist Richard Howells writes,

Le Prince had indeed succeeded making pictures move
at least seven years before the Lumière brothers and
Thomas Edison, and so suggests a re-writing of the
history of early cinema.

- Screen vol.47 #2, p.179~200, 2006

Roundhay Garden Scene, filmed in October 1888, is
believed to be earliest surviving motion picture

it was shot at the home of Le Prince's mother-in-law,
Sarah Whitley in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England

Ms. Whitley and Le Prince's eldest son, Adolphe,
are featured and can therefore be thought of as
Cinema's first actors

the 2-second experimental film was shot at 12 frames
per second

Roundhay Garden Scene


Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge, Le Prince's second film,
is also 2 seconds long; it documents Leeds' 1888
horse-drawn and pedestrian traffic

Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge


for more on Louis Le Prince, check out
E. Kilburn Scott's Adventures in Cybersound,
The Career of L. A. A. Le Prince

Tags: Movies
Posted in Media

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