Men Boxing Explained

Men Boxing
Director:William K. L. Dickson
William Heise
Producer:William K. L. Dickson
William Heise
Cinematography:William K. L. Dickson
William Heise
Studio:Edison Manufacturing Company
Runtime:5 seconds
Country:United States
Language:Silent

Men Boxing is an 1891 American short silent film, produced and directed by William K. L. Dickson and William Heise for the Edison Manufacturing Company, featuring two Edison employees with boxing gloves, pretending to spar in a boxing ring. The 12 feet of film was shot between May and June 1891 at the Edison Laboratory Photographic Building in West Orange, New Jersey, on the Edison-Dickson-Heise experimental horizontal-feed kinetograph camera and viewer, through a round aperture on 3/4 inch (19mm) wide film with a single edge row of sprocket perforations, as an experimental demonstration and was never publicly shown. A print has been preserved in the US Library of Congress film archive as part of the Gordon Hendricks collection.[1] [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Men Boxing . US Library of Congress: American Memory . 2011-05-25 .
  2. Web site: Men Boxing . Silent Era: Progressive Silent Film List . 2011-05-25 .