Undressing Extraordinary
Undressing Extraordinary | |
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Directed by | Walter R. Booth |
Produced by | Robert W. Paul |
Production company | Paul's Animatograph Works |
Release date |
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Running time | 3 minutes 10 secs |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | Silent |
Undressing Extraordinary (AKA: The Troubles of a Tired Traveller) is a 1901 British silent comic trick film directed by Walter R. Booth, featuring a tired traveller struggling to undress for bed. The film, "provides one of the earliest filmed examples of something that would become a staple of both visual comedy and Surrealist art: that of inanimate objects refusing to obey natural physical laws, usually to the detriment of the person encountering them," and according to Michael Brooke of BFI Screenonline, "has also been cited as a pioneering horror film," as, "the inability to complete an apparently simple task for reasons beyond one's control is one of the basic ingredients of a nightmare."[1]
References
- ^ Brooke, Michael. "Undressing Extraordinary". BFI Screenonline Database. Retrieved 24 April 2011.
External links
Categories:
- Short description with empty Wikidata description
- 1901 films
- IMDb title ID not in Wikidata
- British black-and-white films
- British silent short films
- 1901 comedy films
- 1901 short films
- British comedy short films
- Films directed by Walter R. Booth
- Silent British comedy films
- Trick films
- Silent British film stubs
- 1900s film stubs
- 1900s short comedy film stubs