Demolishing and Building Up the Star Theatre
Demolishing and Building Up the Star Theatre
| 29 April 1901 (USA)
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Demolishing and Building Up the Star Theatre Trailers

Time-lapse photography showing the one month-long demolition of the Star Theatre in New York.

Reviews
Reptileenbu

Did you people see the same film I saw?

Hadrina

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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Murphy Howard

I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.

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Kimball

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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gavin6942

Time-lapse photography is used to show the manual dismantling and demolition of New York's Star Theatre over a period of about thirty days.I have to assume that the "building up" is simple dismantling shown in reverse, because if these builders were able to construct a theater in thirty days, that would be amazing in itself. But either way, is this the first time-lapse film? It had to be one of the first, and it really captures something grand.We are also left to wonder about the building in the foreground that keeps taking its awning down and putting it back up up. While that was probably normal at he time, it seems strange today when awnings comes attached to the building and never go away.

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"Demolishing and Building Up the Star Theatre" is a very early example of time lapse photography. The reason that nobody else did it before that is probably also what it is most known of. At least, I could not see any other memorable features in these almost 3 minutes. That's a bit of a shame as director Frederick S. Armitage, one of America's filmmaking pioneers, chose an interesting location to depict in his film. And the idea of letting it collapse again was fairly nice too. I am sure many people who watched this film did not understand the concept and thought it actually did collapse in real as well. Still, I was a bit disappointed by this movie. It has its moments, but it also drags a bit. Maybe 90 seconds max would have been a better idea.

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Snow Leopard

For 1901, this footage is impressive both in its creativity and in its quality. It would be easy to believe that it had been made much later than it actually was. The time-lapse technique works remarkably well, and it creates an interesting and very watchable movie.The idea is a simple one, but ambitious for its time. As a massive old theater building was being torn down, a film crew from American Mutoscope & Biograph set up a stationary camera timed to take photographs at regular intervals over the entire course of the process, creating a fast-paced movie of the building's demolition. The illusion works perfectly, and it is also very interesting to watch. Almost as interesting as the building itself are some of the other details in the surrounding neighborhood. An awning in the foreground continually appears and disappears, along with many other such details.The earliest film-makers often showed quite an imagination and some determined resourcefulness in their efforts to get the most out of their equipment. Although footage like this is now more commonplace and is easier to obtain, this pioneering effort well deserves to be remembered and watched.

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Kieran Kenney

A fascinating example of timelapse photography, and quitepossible the first. Shot from one angle, the movie begins with areal time shot of a building across the street, the Star Theater.Vehicles of all kinds crowd the street below, and the sidewalk isbustling with people.Then time flashes forward. As though watching somebodydressed in layers of clothes start to strip, we watch as Stardisappears, pealed away layer by layer by an ant-like demolitioncrew. The final shot, still from the same angle, is again in realtime, showing people and vehicles passing through the street,past what is now a vacant lot.We're so used to seeing examples of this same sort of scenenow, it's strangely unnerving to see it happen 102 years ago. Thepicture quality of the print I saw was extremely crisp, and finedetails (even the faces of passersby on the street) were visible.The only thing I didn't like so much was seeing a beautiful buildingget torn down. Still, at least it was all captured on film for us to seenow. A fascinating document.

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