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Photo: Wonderopolis

The Horse in Motion (1878) brought photographs to life to answer a simple question about a racehorse. Roundhay Garden Scene (1888) saw a 2.11-second clip make cinematic history. Thomas Edison’s Dickson Greeting (1891) brought the allure of film to America.

Since the late 1800s, the film has been one of the most significant visual mediums of art to capture the artistic spirit of the public. There is nothing quite as captivating as entering a dark theater and leaving the world behind for a couple of hours.

However, the first films in existence weren’t long or complex the way that present-day films often are. Rather, the first flicks were second-long, simple scenes with as much narrative as a grocery list… yet they left audiences across the globe awestruck.

When was the first movie ever made?

The Horse in Motion (1878)

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Photo: Amazon

One of the earliest flicks wasn’t even created for entertainment. Instead, it was produced to answer a simple scientific question posed by racehorse owner, Leland Stanford: Do all four of a horse’s hooves ever leave the ground while they’re galloping? Eadweard Muybridge was the visionary behind this simple film. He would go on to enjoy a fruitful career in motion picture production, according to History 101.

In order to find out the truth, Muybridge arranged for multiple cameras to go off at once to capture a horse’s gallop. Afterward, he arranged all of the captured images into the first moving picture. While this technique may be simple to enact now, at the time, it was visionary. The project was given the name The Horse in Motion (1878). Not only did it answer Stanford’s question (yes!), but the film paved the way for other silent motion picture flicks to come onto the scene.

Roundhay Garden Sequence (1888)

Experts point to another film as the first true film because it was the first continuous motion captured with motion picture equipment. This is the Roundhay Garden Sequence, named so for the location in which the scene was captured, Roundhay, Leeds, West Riding of Yorkshire in the United Kingdom. The film was directed by a French inventor, Louis Le Prince, who captured the 2.11 second scene on Eastman Kodak paper base photographic film with a single-lens camera. Much of what we know about this particular scene was relayed by Le Prince’s son, Adolphe Le Prince, South Tree cites.

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The film was released on October 14, 1888. Photo: World's First

The film was made on property belonging to Le Prince’s mother-in-law and father-in-law, Joseph and Sarah Whitley, parents to Le Prince’s wife, Elizabeth. Named Oakwood Grange, the home’s garden would serve as the sight of the first-ever film. The film itself features Joseph and Sarah Whitley, in addition to a woman believed to be a family friend, Annie Hartley. The trio are ambling about the garden of Oakwood Grange, and Sarah can be seen either walking, or some say, dancing backward, and Joseph’s coattails can be seen sailing through the air as he turns. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the Roundhay Garden Sequence is the oldest known film in existence.

The film was released on October 14, 1888, and was remastered in 1930 by the National Science Museum. Experts took the remaining parts of the sequence and mastered them to 35mm film. Though Adolphe Le Prince claimed the film was shot at 12 frames per second, the expert analysis found the actual rate to be much slower at 7 frames per second.

Cinematic Sensation

A 2015 film titled The First Film tells the story of Le Prince and his magnificent achievement, but the ingenuity and innovation aren’t the only reason this story captivates its audiences. The release of the film and its aftermath are steeped in drama and mystery. Just 10 days after the garden scene was captured, Sarah Whitley died. Not even two years later, Le Prince himself mysteriously vanished from a train on September 16, 1890, before a planned demonstration of the motion picture to take place in the United States. Le Prince was part of a well-known feud with Thomas Edison, the famous American inventor, and some theories support the idea that Le Prince’s disappearance was the result of one of Edison’s sinister plots. Even Adolphe was killed just two years after testifying against Edison in defense of Louis Le Prince’s inventions. While some would consider Le Prince to be the father of cinematography, others disagree, citing the fact that Le Prince contributed to the extreme secrecy that clouded the early practices of motion picture making!

FROM MOTION PICTURE MADNESS TO HOME MOVIE FERVOR

Considering the facts, the first motion picture ever made was actually a home movie! Unlike Le Prince’s film, your old home movies and family films don’t have to fracture and fade. When you choose to digitize your media, your memories can be preserved. Maybe you were once an amateur filmmaker! Letting Southtree turn your masterpieces into digital keepsakes is the best way to be sure they remain to be enjoyed by posterity, just as easily as you can find the Roundhay Garden Sequence on YouTube!

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