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The Great Train Robbery (1903 film) - Wikipedia
The Great Train Robbery is a 1903 American silent short Western film written, produced, and directed by Edwin S. Porter, a former Edison Studios cameraman.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Train_Robbery_(1903_film)
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The Great Train Robbery (1903) - YouTube
This is the longest and most comlpete version of the film available. Filmed in November 1903 at Edison's New York studio, at Essex County Park in New Jersey...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuto7qWrplc
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The Great Train Robbery (1903) - IMDb
Directed by Edwin S. Porter. With Gilbert M. 'Broncho Billy' Anderson, A.C. Abadie, George Barnes, Justus D. Barnes. A group of bandits stage a brazen train hold-up, only to find a determined posse hot on their heels.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0000439/
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The Great Train Robbery (1903)
One of the milestones in film history was the first narrative film, The Great Train Robbery (1903), directed and photographed by Edwin S. Porter - a former Thomas Edison cameraman.
http://www.filmsite.org/grea.html
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The Great Train Robbery (1903)
Bandits rob the passengers on a train in this pioneering western.
http://www.tcm.com/this-month/article/193614|0/The-Great-Train-Robbery.html
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The Great Train Robbery (1903) - Rotten Tomatoes
Director Edwin S. Porter created film history when he completed the 13 sequences for the Great Train Robbery, released in 1903 but based on an 1896 story by Scott Marble. The film's title was also the same as a popular, contemporary stage melodrama. Outstanding for the first parallel development of separate, simultaneous scenes (intercutting), and the first close-up (of an outlaw firing off a shot right at the audience), the Great Train Robbery is among the earliest narrative films with a
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_great_train_robbery1903?
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The Great Train Robbery | film by Porter [1903] | Britannica.com
Other articles where The Great Train Robbery is discussed: history of the motion picture: Méliès and Porter: Porter’s The Great Train Robbery (1903) is widely acknowledged to be the first narrative film to have achieved such continuity of action. Comprising 14 separate shots of noncontinuous, nonoverlapping action, the film contains an early example of parallel editing, two credible back, or rear, projections (the…
https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Great-Train-Robbery-film-by-Porter
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The Great Train Robbery (1903) A Silent Film Review – Movies Silently
One of the earliest blockbusters, this film is a legend in the history of cinema. But how does it hold up (no pun intended) for the modern viewer?
http://moviessilently.com/2013/11/03/the-great-train-robbery-1903-a-silent-film-review/