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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 1: Early Cinema History (Understanding Visual Culture Through Silent Film Collections)

Streible Endnote 30

A Mermaid Dance (no. 10125), Picture Catalog (1902), 73. Spehr, “Filmmaking at the American Mutoscope,” 415. The uncanny double-printing films of December 8, 1900, attributed to operator F. S. Armitage, are in the LOC Paper Print Collection and viewable online. Neptune’s Daughters in fact triple-printed scenic footage and a shipwreck actuality of 1897 with an 1899 trick film, Ballet of the Ghosts, which showed four white women covered in white sheets, then wearing faux Hawaiian costumes. In some cases AMB composite films survive because they were deposited for copyright, while the earlier, uncopyrighted ones do not. Armitage’s Davey Jones’ Locker (1900) printed The Dancing Skeleton (no. 354, 1897) over Wreck of the Schooner “Richmond” (no. 350). Curiously, the AFI Catalog speculates “There is a good chance” that Dancing Skeleton “was August and Louis Lumière’s 1897 French film Le Squelette Joyeux.” The latter survives but does not match the images in Davey Jones’ Locker.

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