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Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAnnie Oakley, the 'Little Miss Sure Shot' of the 'Wild West' gives an exhibition of rifle shooting at glass balls and clay pigeons in a film from the Edison Catalog.Annie Oakley, the 'Little Miss Sure Shot' of the 'Wild West' gives an exhibition of rifle shooting at glass balls and clay pigeons in a film from the Edison Catalog.Annie Oakley, the 'Little Miss Sure Shot' of the 'Wild West' gives an exhibition of rifle shooting at glass balls and clay pigeons in a film from the Edison Catalog.
- Dirección
- Elenco
Francis E. Butler
- Self
- (sin créditos)
Annie Oakley
- Self
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
The picture is unexpected smooth and incredible. With Annie Oakley's perfect shooting performance perfectly make this picture join the rank of great films at the early cinema in Black Maria(mostly consisted with dynamic sport figures)
"Most films featured well-known sports figures, excerpt from noted vaudeville acts, or performances by dancer or acrobats. Annie Oakley displayed her riders. A few Kinetoscope shorts were knockabout comic skits, forerunners of the story film." FILM HISTORY PAGE7 The picture is unexpected smooth and incredible. With Annie Oakley's perfect shooting performance perfectly make this picture join the rank of great films at the early cinema in Black Maria(mostly consisted with dynamic sport figures)
"Most films featured well-known sports figures, excerpt from noted vaudeville acts, or performances by dancer or acrobats. Annie Oakley displayed her riders. A few Kinetoscope shorts were knockabout comic skits, forerunners of the story film." FILM HISTORY PAGE7.
"Most films featured well-known sports figures, excerpt from noted vaudeville acts, or performances by dancer or acrobats. Annie Oakley displayed her riders. A few Kinetoscope shorts were knockabout comic skits, forerunners of the story film." FILM HISTORY PAGE7 The picture is unexpected smooth and incredible. With Annie Oakley's perfect shooting performance perfectly make this picture join the rank of great films at the early cinema in Black Maria(mostly consisted with dynamic sport figures)
"Most films featured well-known sports figures, excerpt from noted vaudeville acts, or performances by dancer or acrobats. Annie Oakley displayed her riders. A few Kinetoscope shorts were knockabout comic skits, forerunners of the story film." FILM HISTORY PAGE7.
Annie Oakley (1894)
This film from Edison is certainly of historical interest since it shows the legendary Annie Oakley performing some of her trick shots. This film clocks in at just 21-seconds but there's no question that you can't help but be highly entertained just because you get to see her in action. What's so fascinating about these old movies is that they often captured famous shows and acts on film and it's great being able to see them today. More times than not these shows are long forgotten but being able to see someone like Oakley was great fun.
This film from Edison is certainly of historical interest since it shows the legendary Annie Oakley performing some of her trick shots. This film clocks in at just 21-seconds but there's no question that you can't help but be highly entertained just because you get to see her in action. What's so fascinating about these old movies is that they often captured famous shows and acts on film and it's great being able to see them today. More times than not these shows are long forgotten but being able to see someone like Oakley was great fun.
It is first film where someone is starring. And who is starring there? See title of movie. You don't know who is Annie Oakley? I did not know also, but Annie is interesting girl who made her career with gun.
Wikipedia says: ''Annie Oakley (born Phoebe Ann Mosey; August 13, 1860 – November 3, 1926) was an American sharpshooter and exhibition shooter. Her "amazing talent"[1] first came to light when the then-15-year-old won a shooting match with traveling-show marksman Frank E. Butler (whom she married). The couple joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West show a few years later. Oakley became a renowned international star, performing before royalty and heads of state.''
I am curious, does USA people know who is Annie Oakley, is she recognized know or she is forgotten.
Wikipedia says: ''Annie Oakley (born Phoebe Ann Mosey; August 13, 1860 – November 3, 1926) was an American sharpshooter and exhibition shooter. Her "amazing talent"[1] first came to light when the then-15-year-old won a shooting match with traveling-show marksman Frank E. Butler (whom she married). The couple joined Buffalo Bill's Wild West show a few years later. Oakley became a renowned international star, performing before royalty and heads of state.''
I am curious, does USA people know who is Annie Oakley, is she recognized know or she is forgotten.
What an interesting little piece of very early film by Thomas Edison's Kinetoscope studio. From the start, even the inventors in the communications field had savvy for marketing. What better way to tout the new motion picture camera than to show a legendary person of the time, Annie Oakley, doing what made her famous?
Another reviewer noted that Oakley appeared to miss all the glass balls tossed in the air. Indeed, this short shows most of them dropping back down and no splattering fragments from hits. I wonder if that wasn't intentional here. The guy who was tossing them was looking right at them and no more than a few feet from where they would be hit and shattered. He wasn't wearing any kind of eye protection and surely would have been pelted with glass splinters had Oakley hit any of the balls. This studio was a single room building that rotated on tracks to follow the sun. The "Black Maria," as it was called, was a very small space, which made it more dangerous for scenes of rifle shooting.
In any event, this was a successful venture for Edison's company. And Annie Oakley continued to entertain the throngs with her dead-eye shooting skills. She performed for crowds that included royalty around the world. For many years, she was a leading draw for Buffalo Bill's Wild West show that performed from 1883 to 1913. Two very good movies have been made about her. "Annie Oakley" of 1935 stars Barbara Stanwyck with a fine cast and a good portrayal of what Buffalo Bill's show must have been like. A 1950 musical comedy biography, "Annie Get Your Gun," stars Betty Hutton and Howard Keel.
For those interested in the technical development of the movies, here's how this little short film came about. Thomas Edison's phonograph, invented in 1877, became so popular that he wanted a way to put music with pictures. Of course, it would take more time to perfect that process (the late 1920s), but in 1988 Edison charged his assistant, William Dickson, with the task of creating a motion picture camera. Dickson pulled together the research and technology of British, French and American scientists and researchers, and used the new American technology of celluloid film to make the first motion picture camera.
Another reviewer noted that Oakley appeared to miss all the glass balls tossed in the air. Indeed, this short shows most of them dropping back down and no splattering fragments from hits. I wonder if that wasn't intentional here. The guy who was tossing them was looking right at them and no more than a few feet from where they would be hit and shattered. He wasn't wearing any kind of eye protection and surely would have been pelted with glass splinters had Oakley hit any of the balls. This studio was a single room building that rotated on tracks to follow the sun. The "Black Maria," as it was called, was a very small space, which made it more dangerous for scenes of rifle shooting.
In any event, this was a successful venture for Edison's company. And Annie Oakley continued to entertain the throngs with her dead-eye shooting skills. She performed for crowds that included royalty around the world. For many years, she was a leading draw for Buffalo Bill's Wild West show that performed from 1883 to 1913. Two very good movies have been made about her. "Annie Oakley" of 1935 stars Barbara Stanwyck with a fine cast and a good portrayal of what Buffalo Bill's show must have been like. A 1950 musical comedy biography, "Annie Get Your Gun," stars Betty Hutton and Howard Keel.
For those interested in the technical development of the movies, here's how this little short film came about. Thomas Edison's phonograph, invented in 1877, became so popular that he wanted a way to put music with pictures. Of course, it would take more time to perfect that process (the late 1920s), but in 1988 Edison charged his assistant, William Dickson, with the task of creating a motion picture camera. Dickson pulled together the research and technology of British, French and American scientists and researchers, and used the new American technology of celluloid film to make the first motion picture camera.
A little slice of American History from the Edison Black Maria studio from November of 1894 shows the real life Annie Oakley shooting fixed targets and airbourne tossed glass balls. Truly a fascinating little piece of film that bridges the real Wild West with a theme that was to run through countless fictional movies in the century to follow.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaCopied at 30 frames per second from a 35mm print preserved by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Now available as part of a "mini series film" entitled "Buffalo Bill's Wild West" on DVD on "More Treasures from American Film Archives 1894-1931".
- ConexionesEdited into Film ist a Girl & a Gun (2009)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Edison Kinetoscope Records: Annie Oakley
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 minuto
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
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By what name was Annie Oakley (1894) officially released in Canada in English?
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