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Le vol du grand rapide

Original title: The Great Train Robbery
  • 1903
  • TV-G
  • 11m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Justus D. Barnes in Le vol du grand rapide (1903)
Classical WesternActionAdventureCrimeDramaShortWestern

A group of bandits stage a brazen train hold-up, only to find a determined posse hot on their heels.A group of bandits stage a brazen train hold-up, only to find a determined posse hot on their heels.A group of bandits stage a brazen train hold-up, only to find a determined posse hot on their heels.

  • Director
    • Edwin S. Porter
  • Writers
    • Scott Marble
    • Edwin S. Porter
  • Stars
    • Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson
    • A.C. Abadie
    • George Barnes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edwin S. Porter
    • Writers
      • Scott Marble
      • Edwin S. Porter
    • Stars
      • Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson
      • A.C. Abadie
      • George Barnes
    • 119User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos21

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    Top cast15

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    Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson
    Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson
    • Bandit
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    A.C. Abadie
    • Sheriff
    • (uncredited)
    George Barnes
    George Barnes
      Justus D. Barnes
      Justus D. Barnes
      • Bandit Who Fires at Camera
      • (uncredited)
      Walter Cameron
      • Sheriff
      • (uncredited)
      John Manus Dougherty Sr.
      • Fourth Bandit
      • (uncredited)
      Donald Gallaher
      Donald Gallaher
      • Little Boy
      • (uncredited)
      Shadrack E. Graham
      • Child
      • (uncredited)
      Frank Hanaway
      • Bandit
      • (uncredited)
      Adam Charles Hayman
      • Bandit
      • (uncredited)
      Morgan Jones
        Robert Milasch
        Robert Milasch
        • Trainman
        • (uncredited)
        • …
        Marie Murray
        • Dance-Hall Dancer
        • (uncredited)
        Frederick T. Scott
        • Man
        • (uncredited)
        Mary Snow
        • Little Girl
        • (uncredited)
        • Director
          • Edwin S. Porter
        • Writers
          • Scott Marble
          • Edwin S. Porter
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews119

        7.222K
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        Featured reviews

        8evanston_dad

        Film Editing Is Born

        It's hard to assign "The Great Train Robbery" a rating, as it shouldn't really be watched as a film the way we watch films now. But from a historical perspective, it's fascinating, and is an excellent example of the use of film editing, an art form then in its infancy and now an award category recognized every year at the Oscars.

        Before this movie, it wasn't customary to tell multiple story lines simultaneously, but here, various activities going on in different locations are intercut to create suspense. D.W. Griffith would use this technique much more ambitiously (and combine it with many other developing film techniques) in "The Birth of a Nation" over ten years later, but credit must be given to "Train Robbery" for blazing a trail.

        Also, this is the movie famous for the shot of an outlaw shooting a gun directly at the camera. I can't imagine what effect this had on audiences at the time, who were probably diving behind their chairs for cover.

        Grade: A
        8clockert

        A start that filmmakers should be proud of...

        As an early film, this film is quite spectacular. Ok, so it's only twelve minutes, but that is twelve minutes of pure action and entertainment. When this film was made, things like special effects were hardly thought of, but notice how well the transgression from person to doll on the "throw the dead guy off the train" goes, and how nicely they have "moved the train" without moving the camera when they leave the locomotive behind.

        This movie is probably the best preview to how modern westerns became, at least if you take the best twelve minutes of many westerns, the twelve where people get shot, beat up and alerted. The movie follows it's storyline perfectly, and is easy to grasp the continuance throughout the film, in all, quite a masterpiece that comes highly recommended.

        Christian Lockert
        Cineanalyst

        Narrative Development: Structure

        "The Great Train Robbery" was the most successful film to date, and its distribution preceded and eventually coincided with the spread of Nickelodeons across America. It didn't instantly create the Western genre; instead, it was part of and led to a spew of crime pictures--a genre begun in England. (G.M. "Billy Bronco" Anderson, who was somewhat of an assistant director on the film, would largely invent the movie Western a few years later after leaving the Edison Company, however.) Although the plot isn't very exciting today, the film remains a landmark in film history--mostly for its narrative structure. It's also notable how matter-of-fact, "realistic" and violent the film is for its time--being detailed and rather objective in its following of the details of the crime (what Neil Harris calls "an operational aesthetic"). The story film was already established by 1903 but was still in its infancy. Filmmakers were still experimenting with how to tell a narrative, and Porter was one of early film's greatest innovators, as well as an astute student of film.

        Throughout his film-making career, Porter was strongly influenced by contemporary British and French films, which he would have ready access to since the Edison Company regularly duped them. His "Uncle Josh at the Moving Picture Show" is a rip-off of Robert Paul's "The Countryman and the Cinematograph." "The Gay Shoe Clerk" is a revision of George Smith's "As Seen Through a Telescope." Porter also introduced intertitles to American cinema in "Uncle Tom's Cabin," having seen them in some of Smith's films. "Life of an American Fireman" reflects James Williamson's "Fire!" The temporal replay in that film was influenced by Georges Méliès's temporal replay of the Moon landing in "Le Voyage dans la lune." "Dream of a Rarebit Fiend" also owes plenty to Méliès.

        "The Great Train Robbery" followed a recently created genre of crime and chase films begun in England. "The Daring Daylight Robbery" was especially of influence, as was, it is said by historians, a 1903 film called "The Robbery of the Mail Coach." "The Great Train Robbery" is also based on a play of the same title by Scott Marble. News of real train robberies also served as inspiration according to the Edison catalogue. Anyhow, with the exception of wholesale rip-offs, it's not discourageable that Porter learned from other films and adopted techniques and style from them for his own. He is worthy of history's praise for being such an avid student of film and one of the more active filmmakers of his time to develop film grammar.

        Some film historians and critics say that Porter's work was uneven, that "The Grain Train Robbery" and perhaps one or two other films were a happenstance success, or fluke. Someone was bound to figure out the techniques of narrative as story films became more complex--confronting such problems as spatially separate actions and the continuity of action. I've seen a good share of Porter's work, however, and it's apparent that he was usually experimenting. He wasn't consistent like Méliès, which is good because his work becomes stale. Porter's previous experiments in editing resulted in this, his most accomplished story film and greatest success.

        There are a few special effects in "The Great Train Robbery," as others have mentioned. It's nothing new: double-exposure matte work for the shot of the train outside the window and for the outside of the moving train's door, hand coloring, in addition to stopping the camera and splicing to replace an actor with what is obviously a mannequin. Most amazing about this picture (for its time) are its structure and the editing and camera techniques employed for its continuity. Panning and tilting wasn't new, but this movement of the camera in one scene to follow the action is exceptional for 1903. Likewise, Porter and others had already used the close-up. Porter employed an insert of a fire alarm in "Life of an American Fireman" and a privileged camera position for "The Gay Shoe Clerk." The shock value of the close-up in this film even serves form as its entirety is supposed to thrill.

        Furthermore, the view from on top of the train is quite good. The transitioning between interior and exterior shots is fluent, and generally so is the continuation of action from scene to scene, with action exiting and entering scenes from appropriate directions. This is elementary film-making now, but in 1903, they were inventing it.

        What I think is the most interesting part of "The Great Train Robbery," though, is its editing between the plot of the telegrapher and that of the robbers after their initial confrontation. After following the robbers for a while, the film cuts back to the "meanwhile" plot of the telegrapher. Initially, the barn dance scene doesn't appear to serve any narrative function--until the telegrapher enters to gather a posse. It's an interesting ordering of and transitioning between parallel actions. The plot isn't in temporal order, and it's a nice testament to Porter's innovation that a few modern viewers have been perplexed by how the posse catches up with the robbers so quickly.

        It would take D.W. Griffith and others to build upon past work and their own in moving towards more entertaining and cinematic films, but the developments in narrative experimented with by pioneers like Porter paved the way.

        (Note: This is one of four films that I've commented on because they're landmarks of early narrative development in film history. The others are "As Seen Through a Telescope," "Le Voyage dans la lune" and "Rescued by Rover.")
        9cjosephlyons

        Formation of Cinematic Narrative

        I enjoy this film even though it is very old and compared to today's cinema, very limited in its attempt at realism. But today's cinema would not be what it is without the original innovation of cinematic devices by Edwin S. Porter, one of films first masters. His progress in narrative construction and his work in special effects techniques astonished audiences like never before. His work was limited specifically because he used the static camera affecting the impact of each of his shots. His unique and influential editing style allowed the audience to take part in the action of the film, not sitting idly watching it. The movie is 12 minutes long and is considered the first narrative film in history. The most exciting scene is when the gangsters raid the train station and rob the train. The train is a really well done mat-shot of a train pulling into the station, frightening the audience in their seats. I personally am most excited by the final closing scene of the gangster shooting his gun, aiming it directly at the audience. This audience point of view shot makes me feel like the narrative of the train robbery enticed me to cheer for the Sheriff, and the angry gangster shoots at me because I was cheering for his enemy. This film and this sequence of the gangster shooting the audience was solidified in cinematic history when Martin Scorsese pays homage in 'Goodfellas', with Joe Pesci gun barrage and sinister look.
        didi-5

        Porter's innovative early film

        This film, often lauded as one of the first movies to include a linear narrative within its running time, came out of the Edison company over a hundred years ago, following their experiments in the previous decades with shorter topical pieces such as cockfighting, dancers, and other limited scenarios.

        'The Great Train Robbery' is a simple enough story - a train is robbed, there is a shoot-out. The interesting scenes for me were the ones where the passengers are held at gunpoint while their valuables are collected, the shoot-out with its hand-coloured bursts of gunfire, and the famous final shot where a gun is fired directly at the audience. Not too frightening now, but back in those days this was quite an innovation.

        Historically important and with a basic plot still in use today, this film holds significant interest for a wide audience (and will take less than a quarter of an hour of your time to view).

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          The original camera negative still exists in excellent condition. The Library of Congress, who holds it, can still make new prints.
        • Goofs
          When the telegraph operator revives with his hands tied behind his back, he uses one of his hands to help him stand up and then quickly puts the hand behind his back again.
        • Alternate versions
          There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "CENTRO! (Straight Shooting, 1917) + IL CAVALLO D'ACCIAIO (The Iron Horse, 1924) + LA GRANDE RAPINA AL TRENO (The Great Train Robbery, 1903)" (3 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
        • Connections
          Edited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)

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        FAQ1

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • May 21, 1904 (France)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Also known as
          • L'attaque du Grand Rapide
        • Filming locations
          • Dover, New Jersey, USA
        • Production company
          • Edison Manufacturing Company
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Budget
          • $150 (estimated)
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          11 minutes
        • Sound mix
          • Silent
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.33 : 1

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        Justus D. Barnes in Le vol du grand rapide (1903)
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