Solar Eclipse
- 1900
You'll never guess quite what this chap can hide under his cone...
Cutting-edge cinema trickery gives the art of illusion a little more magic in this short, fun film, as a conjuror uses a simple fire extinguisher to do anything but put out a fire. Although this is a silent film, the magician is clearly giving his best, most animated patter, distracting our eyes from the cuts that reveal the film's technique. This trick film appears to be one continuous shot, but is made up of several shorter shots edited together to make objects emerge from thin air.
This film was made by the Williamson Kinematograph Company. Scottish-born pharmacist James Williamson moved to Hove, East Sussex in the 1880s. He first began making films in the late 1890s and his new firm shot several 'actuality' films around the country, before moving into trick films such as this one and pioneering more complicated multi-shot, narrative movies. The magician here is played by comic Sam Dalton, who appears in other Williamson shorts.
Queen Victoria's long reign famously saw extraordinary advances: in industry, transport, science, culture... But one late but great innovation is too often missed from the list: the moving image. Yet film forever changed the way we see the world. And even before the French Lumière brothers presented their first demonstrations in London in 1895, British filmmakers were beginning to make their mark.
Here you'll find the most comprehensive gallery of Victorian films ever assembled. Hundreds of films made over the last six years of Victoria's reign, during which film was transformed from the pursuit of a handful of showmen, chemists and amateur enthusiasts into a dynamic industry, from fairground novelty into the greatest entertainment of the age.