The Waif and the Wizard (1901) Poster

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6/10
Tricks.
JoeytheBrit27 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
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.

The Waif and the Wizard features the same young man who appeared in Undressing Extraordinary (and who might be early filmmaker Walter Booth). It's another early example of a two-shot film along the lines of Paul's earlier film Come Along Do!. The young man plays a magician who, after completing his act, agrees to go home with the young boy from the audience who helped him perform his tricks. At the boy's home he finds a sick sister and a worried mother being threatened with eviction by her landlord. The magician turns the landlord into a waiter laden down with food. The most noticeable and impressive moment in the film is the transition shot between scenes when the magician walks toward the camera with his opened umbrella pointed at the camera.
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7/10
Something for the Audience
boblipton18 July 2018
A ragged boy clambers onto a stage to ask a magician a favor. The magician transforms the boy into an umbrella and takes the boy to his home, where he prepares a magical feast for the boy's mother and sick sister.

It's Walter Booth at his most Melies-like, with a bit of social commentary in it. If you can call spirits from the vasty deep, how about calling up a decent meal for me mum? It's quite unusual for an early British film-maker. Most of them were more concerned that gypsies would steal their babies, or poachers would shoot their grouse.

The wizard of the title is uncredited. I like to think it's Booth, who had begun as a stage magician and hadn't lost the common touch.
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9/10
Very sweet and quite exceptional for 1901.
planktonrules5 June 2021
Walter R. Booth directed this wonderful short film all the way back in 1901...and it's a really remarkable film for many reasons. In some ways, it reminded me of the lovely films of French director/actor/magician Georges Méliès, though "The Waif and the Wizard" has a bit more heart and is more than just simple magic tricks created by turning the camera off and on again.

In this story, a stage magician has a child come up and help him in the act. After the trick is done, however, the child talks to the magician and apparently tells him how bad off his family is...and the child is in tattered clothing. So, the magician makes himself and the boy vanish and they soon appear in the boy's home....and the magician makes food appear to help the starving family.

Unlike Georges Méliès pictures, this one is much more sentimental....not better...just more sentimental and sweet. Well worth seeing and it's amazing how much story they crammed into about 90 seconds of film!
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