Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Grandma's Reading Glass

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Directed by
  
George Albert Smith

Running time
  
1 min 20 secs

Language
  
Silent

Director
  
George Albert Smith

Cinematography
  
George Albert Smith

3.4/5
Mubi

Starring
  
Harold Smith

Country
  
United Kingdom

Initial release
  
1900

Producer
  
George Albert Smith

Grandma's Reading Glass Grandma39s Reading Glass 1900 Cinema Cats

Release date
  
November 1900 (1900-11)

Similar
  
As Seen Through a Telescope, The Kiss in the Tunnel, Mary Jane's Mishap, Let Me Dream Again, The Sick Kitten

Grandma's Reading Glass is a 1900 British short silent drama film, directed by George Albert Smith, featuring a young Willy who borrows a huge magnifying glass to focus on various objects, which was shot to demonstrate the new technique of close-up. The film, according to Michael Brooke of BFI Screenonline, "was one of the first films to cut between medium shot and point-of-view close-up.

Contents

Grandma's Reading Glass Landmark Films Of The 20th Century 19001909

"The close-ups themselves were simulated by photographing the relevant objects inside a black circular mask fixed in front of the camera lens," according to Michael Brooke, "which also had the effect of creating a circular image that helped them stand out from the rest of the film." "Smith would develop these techniques in the more narrative-based As Seen Through a Telescope (1900), made the same year."

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BFI reviewer Michael Brooke states that, "there is very little narrative to speak of besides the boy looking around for further objects to examine," "but at the time it was released, that would in itself have been sufficient novelty to maintain the audience's interest."

Grandma's Reading Glass Grandma39s Reading Glass Starico

The film, long thought lost, was discovered in 1960 in the collection of Danish court photographer and film pioneer Peter Elfelt.

Grandma's Reading Glass Grandma39s Reading Glass 1900 Movie Review 2020 Movie Reviews

Grandma s reading glass george albert smith 1900


Authorship dispute

Grandma's Reading Glass FileEyeGRGljpg Wikipedia

Grandma's Reading Glass is one of several films which Dutch journalist Tjitte de Vries claims have been wrong attributed. This claim is based on the identification of family and friends of film-pioneer Arthur Melbourne-Cooper in the film by his daughter Audrey Wadowska, who concludes that the film must therefore have been made by her father.

According to the claim, the film was made by Melbourne-Cooper in his father's photographic studio in St Albans, the grandmother is played by his youngest sister Bertha, the close up of the eye is that of his mother Catherine, the young boy was played by his neighbour's son Bert Massey and the cat is one of the family's Manx kittens.

The counterclaim by film historian Frank Gray is that the film was made by Smith at his studio in St. Anne's Well Gardens, Hove, the grandmother is played by his wife Laura Bayley, the close up of the eye is that of character actor Tom Green, the young boy was played by his son Harold and the cat is the family's tabby.

The claim by de Vries is further supported by the lack of any mention of payments to Tom Green at the time of production in Smith's cash book, while the counterclaim by Gray is supported by evidence showing that surviving prints were produced on the same step printer as the undisputed Let Me Dream Again.

Campaigning by Wadowska resulted in the film being re-attributed to Melbourne-Cooper by New York's Museum of Modern Art Film Archive, but other archives, including the BFI National Film and Television Archive, have not done the same.

References

Grandma's Reading Glass Wikipedia