Electrocuting an Elephant
Electrocuting an Elephant | |
---|---|
Overblik | |
Genre | Stumfilm, dokumentarfilm |
Instrueret af | Thomas Edison |
Fotografering | Edwin Stanton Porter |
Produceret af | Edison Studios |
Distributør | Edison-selskabet |
Udgivelsesdato | 1903 |
Længde | 74 s |
Oprindelsesland | USA |
Sprog | Engelsk |
Links | |
på IMDb | |
Information med symbolet hentes fra Wikidata. |
Electrocuting an Elephant er en amerikansk stumfilm fra 1903 af Edwin S. Porter.[1][2]
Referencer
- ^ Electrocuting an Elephant
- ^ Stuart Marshall Bender. Legacies of the Degraded Image in Violent Digital Media
Eksterne henvisninger
- Wikimedia Commons har flere filer relateret til Electrocuting an Elephant
- Electrocuting an Elephant på Internet Movie Database (engelsk)
- Electrocuting an Elephant på The Movie Database (engelsk)
- Electrocuting an Elephant på Filmaffinity (engelsk)
Medier brugt på denne side
Electrocuting an Elephant edison film 1903 frame shot.png
A frame from the 1903 74 second short documentary film Electrocuting an Elephant produced by Edwin S. Porter or Jacob Blair Smith for the Edison Manufacturing Company. On January 4, 1903 Topsy the elephant was electrocuted by the owners of the Coney Island amusement park "Luna Park" in an event to raise publicity about the opening of the new park (at this point still under construction). The film captured the point when 6600 volts of electricity was turned on. Behind Topsy is the unfinished "Electric Tower" with a sign advertising "OPENING MAY 2ND 1903 LUNA PARK $1,000,000 EXPOSITION, THE HEART OF CONEY ISLAND".
A frame from the 1903 74 second short documentary film Electrocuting an Elephant produced by Edwin S. Porter or Jacob Blair Smith for the Edison Manufacturing Company. On January 4, 1903 Topsy the elephant was electrocuted by the owners of the Coney Island amusement park "Luna Park" in an event to raise publicity about the opening of the new park (at this point still under construction). The film captured the point when 6600 volts of electricity was turned on. Behind Topsy is the unfinished "Electric Tower" with a sign advertising "OPENING MAY 2ND 1903 LUNA PARK $1,000,000 EXPOSITION, THE HEART OF CONEY ISLAND".