A Much Better Improvement Over Monkeyshines No 1
17 June 2017
Having made Monkeyshines No 1 earlier the same year and discovering it to have failed in capturing motion and photography in the way he had envisioned, inventor Thomas A. Edison sought to improve his Kinetograph to perfection by continuing to play with the invention. Thus, after more tampering and messing, the camera was ready for the next test, which resulted as the follow-up to the earlier Monkeyshines movie. Here, it is clear changes to the instrument proved successful: the body of Albanese (if that's him again--it almost half looks like a woman) is not as blurry, more detail can be sensed and the movement is much smoother and does not make the worker look as if he's changing shape constantly.

Yet, there was still work to do. The blurriness of the character was still apparent, and, what's more, the movement wasn't quite enough refined. Ultimately, these still unsatisfactory results led to yet a third experiment, remembered now as Monkeyshines No 3. The details of this third test are, unfortunately, unknown as it either no longer exists or is simply unrestored. Nevetheless, it was presumably after this third, apparently more improved short that Edison began testing movements in other ways: the slow, smooth movements of W. K. L. Dickson as he moved his hat from one hand to the next in greeting; the quick movements of a young Newark athlete as he swung Indian clubs; the swift movements of two so-called boxers as they throw punches at eachother. By the time these experiments came around, the camera had wonderfully improved--and after another year, the Edison company would finally be able to publicize the new fad for the first time in America.

While I'm at it, let's fully explain why this trilogy of experimental shorts was given the title of 'Monkeyshines'. Since these shorts were all mere camera tests, it's quite obvious they were never really given a title at all. Drawing these conclusions (and this is only a guess) let's assume the people of the Kino International company thought to put them on the movies begin set with a proper title and settled on calling them 'Monkeyshines' since the definition of this word translates to 'mischevious behavior' (the attitudes of which the factory worker shows in his comedic prancings before the Kinetographic lens). This would thus explain why the titles of the camera tests are put in brackets since they may never have had true titles. But this, of course, is merely an assumption and unless you're a film historian or a member of the company, we'll probably never be sure.
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