The Arrest of a Bookmaker (1895) Poster

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6/10
Possibly Cinema's First Drama
JoeytheBrit13 November 2009
Robert Paul is a largely forgotten name today, but he was a major pioneer of British cinema, and was quick to grasp the commercial potential of cinema in ways that better known pioneers such as William Friese-Greene were not. He was more of a mechanic than a filmmaker making, with Birt Acres, his own camera on which to shoot films in 1895, and also Britain's first projector, the Animatograph, with which to screen them in 1896. Early in the 20th century he had a custom-made studio built in Muswell Hill.

Footpads is a very short film boasting one of cinema's earliest – if not its' first – drama. It was made for the Kinetoscope rather than the screen, and was the last film Paul made with Birt Acres (the two would quickly become bitter enemies when their short partnership prematurely disintegrated). The film has a surprisingly realistic city backdrop against which we see a street mugging foiled by the police.
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7/10
What is Vinola You Ask?
boblipton23 August 2020
Two toughs grab a well-dressed gentleman in downtown London. A policeman rushes to help the victim, but in the confusion, they overpower the forces of polite society.

It's a very early staged incident from the works of Robert W. Paul. He, like many of the British Victorian film makers had a decidedly middle-class outlook, and so for a decade, threats to the middle class were offered, from robbers, to gypsies to men who kissed women in railway carriages. In the US and France, the film makers soon realized that the middle and upper classes went to live theater, and turned their attention to subjects that might interest their actual audience.

You may notice the flashing sign for Vinola. Apparently this was a brand of shaving soap.
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Extremely Impressive for 1895
Tornado_Sam12 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
While Paul did create a number of actualities, he was also one of the first people to begin to tell stories with film. This film, "Footpads" from 1895 (or 1896) not only tells a ficticious story, but it is an exciting story which must have excited audiences. Considering that when this film was made many early shorts featured everyday life with no plots, costumes, sets, or acting, this is very impressive. It's about some muggers attacking a man on the street when a policeman comes to the rescue. Not only is it exciting, it uses a painted (and actually pretty realistic) backdrop. Wow. This is proof that Georges Méliès was not the only guy trying new things.
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8/10
A Chaotic Turn of Events in 1895
PCC092111 September 2023
This film is also known as, Footpads (1895). Three robbers (footpads), attack a sophisticated gentlemen, who is eventually rescued by a police officer, who is passing by the crooked scene. The film is directed by Edison competitor, Robert W. Paul, who made a lot of films with Birt Acres. Arrest of a Bookmaker (1895), was initially released in a Kinetoscope form in 1895, but did not get shown in a theater venue until 1896. Paul's films were initially treated as Kinetoscope clones, but he re-released all of his Kinetoscopes, in projected theaters in 1896, thus making them officially, theatrical motion pictures.

Arrest of a Bookmaker (1895), aka Footpads (1895), would become known as one of the first crime-dramas ever made. It also boasts, as being one of the earliest examples of creating realism, by utilizing the backdrop of a set. The background is a nicely painted depiction of a city-view, which creates an eerie feeling of a wet, dangerous, London night in 1895. The only drawback is, you can't tell, who the bad-guys are, the way they are all dressed and rolling around on the ground. It took me a couple of viewings to figure out what was going on. It is a quick 25 second film.

8.2 (B MyGrade) = 8 IMDB.
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