Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

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silentfilm

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Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 7:06 am

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/mar/09/oldest-charles-dickens-film-discovered

World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

A 111-year-old film which depicts a character from Bleak House, was found by an archivist at the British Film Institute

Reuters in London
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 8 March 2012 22.46 EST

Actors Laura Bayley and Tom Green in The Death of Poor Joe, taken from the oldest surviving film based on the works of Charles Dickens. Photograph: Bfi/PA

An archivist at the British Film Institute has stumbled across a 1901 movie just one minute long which turns out to be the earliest surviving film featuring a character from the works of Charles Dickens.

Bryony Dixon was researching early films of China when she noticed an entry in a catalogue referring to The Death of Poor Joe, which she realised could refer to a character in Dickens' Bleak House.

Not expecting to find a film to match the catalogue entry - most movies this old have not survived - Dixon says she was astonished to discover the film was actually in the BFI's collection, albeit under a different title.

The discovery was announced on Friday, just over a month after the bicentenary of Dickens' birth was celebrated around the world.

"It's wonderful to have discovered such a rare and unique film so close to Dickens' bicentennial," Dixon said. "Not only does it survive but it is the world's earliest Dickensian film! It looks beautiful and is in excellent condition."

Before the BFI's latest discovery, the earliest known Dickens film was Scrooge or Marley's Ghost, released in November 1901. It remains the earliest direct adaptation.

The Death of Poor Joe has been identified as the work of British film pioneer G.A. Smith and is believed to have been filmed in Brighton some time before March 1901.

It depicts Dickens' Jo, a poor street sweeper in Bleak House, at night against a churchyard wall freezing in the winter snow with his broom.

A watchman comes along and catches Jo just as he falls to the ground dying. The watchman tries to help but it is too late, and Jo puts his hands together in prayer, taking the lamp for heavenly light as he dies.

According to the BFI, the short film may actually have been inspired not only by Dickens but also Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Match Girl in which a child dies in the snow while fantasising about the warmth she needs.

In the film, Jo (spelled "Joe" in the catalogue) is played by a woman called Laura Bayley, who was G.A. Smith's wife.

The film will be screened as a special addition to the programme of Dickens: pre-1914 Short Films on March 9 and 23 at the BFI in London
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Silent London

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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 8:50 am

And you can watch it here:
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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 9:59 am

I could use some digital restoration myself...
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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 1:09 pm

Discoverinbg film while cleaning-up the closet

How many gems are hide in their vaults ?...
Keep thinking...
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Rodney

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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 3:16 pm

It's charming how whoever is off-screen operating the spotlight just isn't able to track the actor's hand-held light to keep the two in sync. There's a couple of versions of Faust where the same problem applies with a swinging lamp. And what's with the moving reflections of tree branches? Perhaps a "storm" effect, or an attempt to get more light on the set? I'm not sure it succeeds. Still, nice to see this. Thanks for posting.
Rodney Sauer
The Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra
www.mont-alto.com
"Let the Music do the Talking!"
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urbanora

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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 4:05 pm

It was filmed in the open air, almost certainly at St Ann's Well Gardens, Hove, where the director G.A. Smith had his studio. The shadows are cast from the trees, and the sheet backdrop is blowing in the wind.

Here's the 'studio':

Image

More information here:

http://thebioscope.net/2012/03/09/the-death-of-poor-joe
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Donald Binks

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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostFri Mar 09, 2012 6:28 pm

I saw it last night on the Beeb World Service. It is only 60 seconds - perhaps the shortest version of a Dickens book ever?
It is interesting from its age and I wonder what else is lying around on dusty shelves in archives?
Silents Please!
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Donald Binks
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westegg

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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostSat Mar 10, 2012 6:39 am

I found it occasionally compelling but generally overlong.

:wink:
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Re: Guardian: World's oldest Charles Dickens film discovered

PostSun Mar 11, 2012 12:02 pm

Didn't Jo in Bleak House die indoors, in bed?

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