I'm very grateful to you for the educational video. I'm a radio and television programming student and visuals like this are very useful for students like me and other people who are interested in this field. ❤
Inventor: "I've just invented a cool thing that simulates motion from a series of still pictures, but I need a simple, easy to remember name for it to appeal to the public. I know, I'll call it the Phenakistoscope."
i know this video was posted forever ever ago, but if you're still around, could you please cite the original video? I would love to view the rest of it and use it as a reference in my research. thanks!
Sure. Please se: www.kinolorber.com/film/view/id/108 and www.imdb.com/title/tt0207471/ Film Before Film, or "Was geschah wirklich zwischen den Bildern?" is an extraordinary documentary with a wealth of images of "proto-cinema." or "archaic cinema," among other terms used these days. It was hugely helpful in a class I used to teach on "The Birth of Cinema." Quite a few students were inspired to experiment with phenakistoscopes and other forms. I'm not at all sure how you could obtain a complete copy these days, but contact me if you're thinking of that. If you feel like sharing the subject of your research, I'd be interested to hear about it.
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Hello, I love this video. I work in a museum and we are developing an exhibition about how cinema began. Would you be happy for us to possibly use excerpts from this video to help explain early entertainment to our visitors? Thanks, Charlotte
Ms Howard: Please contact me at my email bernardwelt@gmail.com. I'd like to know what museum it is, and the nature of the exhibition planned. I did not originate this video and don't have distribution rights.
Hello! The video is not mine; it was made quite a long time ago by a German collector of proto-cinema . I don’t know where his collection is, but I happened to see some of it once, by pure chance, in an exhibition at the Lumières Brothers museum in Lyon France. The video is called Film Before Film. It was released in 1984 and is still listed at Kino Lorber, if you want to find the complete film,
For anyone wondering, this is from a documentary called "Film Before Film". Full video can be found at: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-fKTvEsvH59g.html. Hopefully it's still up if you come across this comment. You never know with these kinds of videos lol
i really want to make something like a zootrope for my art exam. Ive watched a few tutorials but i dont like the designs of them as much as the ones in this video. Ill do what i can
Film Before Film is a German-language documentary made by Werner Nekes in 1986 to show a collection of "proto-cinema," also called "archaic cinema," etc--mechanical devices that either project an image using light, or create the illusion of motion: the two essential elements of cinema. It's a great resource for History of Cinema courses like mine. It's available from Kino Video.
By the way, commentators often note that Nekes' understanding of "persistence of vision" as part of the perception of motion in cinema is now outdated. Research has shown that this is a psychological, not physiological phenomenon--that is, not due to properties of the visual apparatus.