Motion pictures were first seen in 1894, when Thomas Edison
introduced the Kinetoscope, a device for individually looking at
film through a viewer. Over the next three years, Edison
manufactured almost 1,000 Kinetoscopes and produced some 250 films
to show in them. A million people worldwide first saw motion
pictures through these devices.
This book describes in detail how Kinetoscopes worked and how
they were sold, and describes the parlors to which the public
flocked, fascinated by the novelty of moving images. It examines
how the machines were copied by others and later eclipsed by the
advent of projection. It also indicates where surviving machines
can be found in the United States and Europe. The book concludes
with an index to Edison's films between 1892 and 1896, and presents
titles, filming dates, subject descriptions, and information on the
location of surviving copies. Copiously illustrated, the book is a
vital research tool for all students of motion picture history.
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