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Oldest Film on DVD ?
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DVD Profiler Unlimited Registrantrorschach999
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Registered: May 10, 2007
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ok I'[d like to know who has and whit is the oldest film on DVD (purchased) not home made ie I have a few movies from the 20s but I know theyre not the oldest just something i've wondered thats all

regards

Mike

EDIT : - PS - this includes sileint movies too but not Laurel and Hardy, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd as I know theyr're on DVD and will be forever i think
regards
rorschach999

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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar Contributorlyonsden5
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There is a Kino Video release of "The Movies Begin" which has films dating back to 1894 that is in the Db. I believe Ya_Shin has it in his collection.

There are others with late 1800s films, Dan W I know has some.

My oldest is the 1923 Epic Silent Film of the Ten Commandments that is included with the 50th anniversary collection of the Charlton Heston movie.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantBattling Butler
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Edison - The Invention of the Movies set includes experimental films going back to 1891. Generally regarded as the oldest films on DVD
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I have Winsor McCay: The Master Edition (014381-198225) which contains a Little Nemo short from 1911.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorwidescreenforever
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My oldest in my collection, is the 1915 3 hour/ tinted / D.W. Griffith's  Birth of a Nation..  , .

AFI lists it at #44 for Greatest Film .

I find any movie before this period are usually 'smaller type' movies., But I would like to see Great Train Robbery from 1904 ., but it isn't available on DVD  yet.
I don't know the running time of The Great Train Robbery but it is only 183 meters in length , so at 24 Frames Per seconds how many minutes would that be??
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantDan W
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The oldest, eh?

Does it matter how long it is?

If length is not a factor the oldest title "officially" released to DVD in Region 1 or 2 would be..........


1889 - Edison: The Invention of the Movies

A very short camera test film titled: "Monkey Shines, No. 1" is the earliest at 1889.
"Dickson Greeting";  "Newark Athlete (with Indian Clubs)"; and "Men Boxing"; all date from 1891 or earlier. They are camera tests as well.
Dan
 Last edited: by Dan W
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantDan W
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I guess it's only fair to also mention the "Series Photography" on "The Movies Begin: A Treasury of Early Cinema".

It is an homage to Eadweard Muybridge and his "Primitive Motion Studies". His motion studies were several different series of stills taken in fast sequence in an attempt to capture motion. Usually you find these in a sort of "contact sheet" format where all you see is the series of photographs on a printed page. This DVD set has taken several of these series and put them in motion by playing them in sequence rather than showing them as a group of photographs as they were originally presented. In effect, simply animating Muybridge's work.

These studies date from 1877-1885.
Dan
 Last edited: by Dan W
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantVibroCount
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Quoting Dan W:
Quote:
I guess it's only fair to also mention the "Series Photography" on "The Movies Begin: A Treasury of Early Cinema".

It is an homage to Eadweard Muybridge and his "Primitive Motion Studies". His motion studies were several different series of stills taken in fast sequence in an attempt to capture motion. Usually you find these in a sort of "contact sheet" format where all you see is the series of photographs on a printed page. This DVD set has taken several of these series and put them in motion by playing them in sequence rather than showing them as a group of photographs as they were originally presented. In effect, simply animating Muybridge's work.

These studies date from 1877-1885.


Those included on this set are animated recreations of his 1877-1885 motion studies, with the animations made in the 20th Century. This disc also has a couple of films dating from 1894 ("Sandow" & "The Barber Shop"), but "The Barber Shop" was more likely created in 1893.

"'Edison: The Invention of the Movies" has a cover blurb stating: "140 Edison Company films 1891-1918", but there is a section on disc 1 from 1889-91, all early Edison camera tests (Monkeyshines, No. 1; Dickson Greeting; Newark Athlete (with Indian Clubs); Men Boxing.

So, 20th Century animation recreating motion from series stills, 1877. Actual film, produced at the time as a camera test, 1889. Film as film, to be shown publicly, from the Edison collection, an 1893 "Blacksmithing Scene" (& the Barber Shop one, as well).

Those are the oldest I've found.
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 Last edited: by VibroCount
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantVibroCount
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Quoting widescreen forever:
Quote:
... I would like to see Great Train Robbery from 1904 ., but it isn't available on DVD  yet.
I don't know the running time of The Great Train Robbery but it is only 183 meters in length , so at 24 Frames Per seconds how many minutes would that be??


Here are two DVDs with the Great Train Robbery (which is listed as being made in 1903) -- the film is about 12 minutes long:
The Great Train Robbery: 100th Anniversary Special Edition


Region 1

Released: 12/21/2003

Full Frame 1.33:1




The Great Train Robbery and Other Primary Works


Region 1

Released: 2/19/2002

Full Frame 1.33:1





The first is a stand alone DVD, the second is included in the "Movies Begin" boxset (but I think it is available outside the boxset) from Kino Video.
If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.

Cliff
 Last edited: by VibroCount
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