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The X-Ray Fiend

  • 1897
  • TV-PG
  • 1m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
The X-Ray Fiend (1897)
ComedyHorrorShort

A man and woman are flirting when a professor turns on an X-ray machine, revealing their insides. After turning it off again the two have a dispute and break up.A man and woman are flirting when a professor turns on an X-ray machine, revealing their insides. After turning it off again the two have a dispute and break up.A man and woman are flirting when a professor turns on an X-ray machine, revealing their insides. After turning it off again the two have a dispute and break up.

  • Director
    • George Albert Smith
  • Stars
    • Laura Bayley
    • Tom Green
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Albert Smith
    • Stars
      • Laura Bayley
      • Tom Green
    • 9User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast2

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    Laura Bayley
      Tom Green
      • Professor
      • Director
        • George Albert Smith
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews9

      6.01.1K
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      Featured reviews

      Cineanalyst

      Courtship Comedy, Science Parody and Trick Film

      In addition to being a trick film, "The X-Ray Fiend" could be added to the list of what historians of early British film have called "courtship comedies". Reportedly, Alfred Moul and Robert W. Paul may've started this genre with "The Soldier's Courtship" (1896). Also in 1897, George Albert Smith, the maker of this film, made the courtship comedy "Hanging Out the Clothes" (see my review of that film for further discussion). In these films, a couples' canoodling is interrupted (by the X-Ray camera in this one) and someone is knocked around a bit--what film historians call a "punitive ending". Courtship comedies generally were set in a pastoral or park setting, but the costume trick in "The X-Ray Fiend" required filming in a studio against a black background; however, the film does retain the park bench.

      The trick film was an even more popular genre of early cinema. The tricks in this one are two substitution-splices: the film was cut to switch the actors' costumes to and from skeletons, but make it appear that the change is a result of the X-Ray camera exposing the couples' skeletons. This editing trick had been invented a couple years earlier with motion pictures' first edit in "The Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots". Georges Méliès and Pathé used it in trick films as early as 1896 in "The Vanishing Lady" (Escamotage d'une dame au théâtre Robert Houdin) and "Turn-of-the-Century Barber" (Le barbier fin de siècle), respectively.

      The narrative device for the trick is X-rays, which was newsy at the time--since physicist Wilhelm Röntgen has recently been the first to systematically study X-rays, so "The X-Ray Fiend" is of some historical interest in that respect, too. Also in 1897, John Macintyre was the first to make scientific X-ray films ("X-Ray Cinematography of Frog's Legs"). "The X-Ray Fiend" may be parodying Macintyre's footage. Additionally, the X-ray camera makes "The X-Ray Fiend" an early self-referential film, as it's a film about a kind of filming.

      Yet, simply put, this is just 46 feet of broad humor and unconvincing skeleton costumes. Nevertheless, George Albert Smith was one of early cinema's most innovative pioneers; in some ways, he was more innovative than the more well-known Méliès and Edwin S. Porter. After this film, Smith went on to introduce or develop various filmic techniques and narrative innovations, including: multi-shot films, close-ups, point-of-view shots, extended scene dissection and match-on-action cuts, insert shots, parallel action, title cards, masking, multiple-exposure photography and Kinemacolor. Smith was key to developing film narrative, technique and grammar.
      8MisterSisterFister

      X-Rays, Man

      There really isn't enough to say for a review, si ce its only 45 seconds long, but its definitely worth watching. The skeleton costumes were pretty amusing.
      6JoeytheBrit

      The X-Ray Fiend review

      Imaginative little short from the Brighton School in which a canoodling couple are transformed into living skeletons by an x-ray machine. Nicely done.
      Michael_Elliott

      Nice Science Fiction

      X-Ray Fiend, The (1897)

      *** (out of 4)

      Forgotten sci-fi/comedy about a man and woman who are flirting with one another when another man comes up to them with an x-ray machine, zaps them and turns them into skeletons. This "trick" movie was clearly influenced by the work of Georges Melies but it still has enough charm to make it worth viewing. The interesting thing about this film is that it features x-rays not too long after they were actually discovered so we have a very early "idea" of what they are and how to use them. Obviously the way they're used here makes the film science fiction but at the same time it's a fun idea and one that makes for some good entertainment. At only 45-seconds the film doesn't last too long so don't expect any type of long-running story. Instead, we get a simple joke but the effects are nicely done and in the end this is certainly worth watching (on YouTube of course).
      4F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

      His hand bone's connected to her thigh bone

      'The X-Ray Fiend' is a very short film produced and directed by the Victorian showman George Albert Smith. This is a 'trick' film: one of many such films made before 1910, inspired by the movies of Georges Melies, in which the very thin plot of the film is merely a vehicle for trick photography. 'The X-Ray Fiend' is more interesting than most other films of this genre, because it deals with a recent scientific discovery. Wilhelm Roengten had discovered x-rays in November 1895 (about sixteen months before this movie was made): 'The X-Ray Fiend' deals satirically with Roentgen's discovery at a time when it was still new and miraculous.

      In this short film, a young couple are embracing: this by itself was a fairly strong image for the sedate filmgoers of 1897. They are so rapt in each other's attentions that they fail to notice a bizarre-looking professor who arrives, toting a weird apparatus which he aims at them. This turns out to be an x-ray projector. When the professor switches it on, the outer bodies of the man and woman turn invisible, and now we see their skeletons. The two skeletons are still embracing, blissfully unaware of their transformation.

      It would have been more interesting if the x-ray projector had worked more gradually, so that we first see the couple's clothing fading away to reveal their naked bodies underneath ... followed by the fading of their flesh to reveal their musculature, and only then skeletonising them. No such luck.

      This is a crude film, with trickery that is very obvious from our modern standpoint, but it has some historical value, and it's so bizarre that it still retains some humour. I'll rate this movie 4 points out of 10.

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      Storyline

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • October 1897 (United Kingdom)
      • Country of origin
        • United Kingdom
      • Language
        • None
      • Also known as
        • The X-Rays
      • Production company
        • George Albert Smith Films
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        1 minute
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Silent

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