Girls Taking Time Checks
Girls Taking Time Checks
| 30 April 1904 (USA)
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Almost 200 women file by a device on the wall from which they take their time checks. A man runs half-way across the screen at the end of the film.

Reviews
Exoticalot

People are voting emotionally.

Organnall

Too much about the plot just didn't add up, the writing was bad, some of the scenes were cringey and awkward,

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Maidexpl

Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast

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Ella-May O'Brien

Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.

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Michael_Elliott

Girls Taking Time Checks (1904) During the early 1900's Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company made a number of industrial films that allowed the public to see what went on inside their buildings. Needless to say, these films didn't contain any sort of plot but some might find them interesting.If you've stumbled across any of my reviews for this series then you'll probably read the exact same thing in each of them. The film starts off well enough as we see a line of women clocking in as they begin (or end) work. The only problem is that we see the exact same thing for over three minutes, which gets very boring after a while since we're just seeing the same thing over and over again. Had this simply lasted a minute like those films from the 1890s then it would have been much more entertaining but we pretty much see every worker go through the line.

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boblipton

One after another, woman after woman walks briskly but calmly by the stand where her time card is stored and takes it. There seems to be hundreds of them as this goes on for three minutes. When the last is gone, a man rushes in.This is one of the series of industrial films shot by Billy Bitzer at the Westinghouse plant in Pittsburgh. As you might expect from Bitzer, it is well composed and the movement is decent, but it's not particularly brilliant, despite the capper joke. It does illustrate, as do almost all the shorts in this series, the amazing industrial might that was building up in Pittsburgh, but except for the nascent feminist slant, showing these women as capable of making their own living and the laziness of men -- it is of only historical interest.

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