Amateur movie with Big budget
This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
View MoreI have absolutely never seen anything like this movie before. You have to see this movie.
View MoreA great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
View MoreThe photography shown here is pretty fascinating, and we get some pretty nice shots of the aftermath of the San Francisco earthquake. The film is 1 minute, but in that minute we get some pretty nice views, and the film is short enough that it doesn't really get boring. Recommended for film buffs and historians. This footage was well taken and gives us lots of detail for 1 minute.
View More. . . the description from the earlier reviewer shows that the Kino people retitled this piece as FILMS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO EARTHQUAKE, tacking on a half-minute scan of headlines from various San Francisco newspaper special editions at the beginning (Examples: "Fire, Following Earthquake, Is Sweeping San Francisco; Dead or Injured Already 5,000;" "Ocean Rushes in, Sweeping Whole Valley;" "Entire City Seems Doomed to Destruction;" "San Francisco Seems Doomed;" "Flames Sweep over Whole City;" "Thousands Dead in Outskirts;" & "Martial Law, Looters Shot, Capital Aids" from THE EVENING TELEGRAM; plus "San Francisco Ablaze; Citizens Flee in Terror--Nothing to Stop the Sweep of Flames, and Aid Is Asked from Outside;" & "One Thousand Lives Believed to Have Been Lost; Palace Hotel and Other Famous Structures Destroyed" from THE WORLD). With these headline scans, this collage of snippets from 13 shorts filmed by Robert K. Bonine (to which pianist Jon Mirsalis has added a score) runs 114 seconds. The DVD film notes guy writes that these 13 shorts were used at 1906 fund raisers back East, and had individual titles such as DYNAMITING RUINS & RESCUING SOLDIERS CAUGHT IN THE FALLEN WALLS.
View MoreThe photography in this short feature is pretty effective in conveying (and preserving) some of what it must have felt like to view the aftermath of the severe 1906 earthquake in San Francisco. In a little over a minute, it shows footage of several different scenes that illustrate various aspects of the disaster: fires, damaged buildings, disrupted roads, and so forth. Most of the sights are those you would expect, but there are one or two unexpected images as well. The print is not always very clear, but then it's not that bad for having been taken in the midst of a chaotic situation, and then having to endure almost a century of potential deterioration.To those who watched it when this film was first made, it must have been quite an experience to see these kinds of pictures from the scene of such a frightening situation. The images won't seem as overwhelming now, when we see such footage so frequently, but this is still a rare visual record of an event that we'd otherwise know only from prose accounts and still photographs.
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