IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.1K
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In one glorious point-of-view shot, a vehicle dashes full-speed into an ill-starred passer-by.In one glorious point-of-view shot, a vehicle dashes full-speed into an ill-starred passer-by.In one glorious point-of-view shot, a vehicle dashes full-speed into an ill-starred passer-by.
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10evandyni
This was amazing work for the time period. If this was a 3D movie I might have had to leave the theater because WOW. While the film was short that was expected for being from 1900. I could've watched this film for hours however.
This is a great little film. There are three things happening here in this 43 second gem. First off, you are looking at something that is a glimpse into our past. It shows what the world was like 120 years ago. It is probably a small part of a few hours of motion picture recordings of what life was like over a century ago on this little blue marble. Before 1895 there wasn't anything. It is something very rare that we have therefore it is precious.
The second thing going on here is the fact that there is a contrast between technologies. First, we see the horse and buggy go past the camera and then there's a puff of smoke. Just as the smoke starts to clear out comes the car or horseless carriage. There is a contrast between the buggy and the car. In 43 seconds this film gives us an amazing preview of things to come.
And, of course, the final thing happening in this film is the climactic ending. Do we really feel that the woman cannot drive that vehicle or was she supposed to do that? Do we need to worry about the fact that someone may have gotten hurt badly during this? We also have to take note, that because this film is so short and so new for its time, it reminds us of what we are like now when we watch our YouTube videos. Being as it is one of the first movies ever made it's a wonderful piece of work.
8.6 (B+ MyGrade) = 8 IMDB
The second thing going on here is the fact that there is a contrast between technologies. First, we see the horse and buggy go past the camera and then there's a puff of smoke. Just as the smoke starts to clear out comes the car or horseless carriage. There is a contrast between the buggy and the car. In 43 seconds this film gives us an amazing preview of things to come.
And, of course, the final thing happening in this film is the climactic ending. Do we really feel that the woman cannot drive that vehicle or was she supposed to do that? Do we need to worry about the fact that someone may have gotten hurt badly during this? We also have to take note, that because this film is so short and so new for its time, it reminds us of what we are like now when we watch our YouTube videos. Being as it is one of the first movies ever made it's a wonderful piece of work.
8.6 (B+ MyGrade) = 8 IMDB
Automobiles were still the source of a lot of humour when this film was made so it is no surprise the Hepworth's made a comedy film about the perils of encountering a horseless carriage. The camera is in the middle of the road as a horse and buggy come by. They pass by without calamity and you fully expect some hapless pedestrian to wander into the road just as another comes by. Well guess what? In this movie the camera, and hence the audience, plays the part of the pedestrian. An automobile comes around the corner, drives straight at the camera and . ..well . . .THAT is how it (almost) feels to be run over; the film is a lot more painless than the actual experience. Seeing this film I wonder if the Hepworth's were doing a conscious parody of the 1896 Lumiere film THE ARRIVAL OF A TRAIN AT LA CIOTAT in which the sight of a train coming right at the camera is said to have panicked many people seeing their first moving picture? Perhaps.
OK so the title more or less gives away the entire "plot" of this very short short film but it is still quite interesting. The point obviously is to try and amaze the audience and draw a reaction by having a car rushing towards the viewer in the hope that audiences still dealing with this new technology will instinctively panic somewhat. Watching it now of course I didn't react this way but you can imagine how it once did (even today we do it in the cinemas it now just means it has to move faster and have effects that make it a lot realer.
However the film is nicely done because the cart going by first makes us assume safety before the car is seen approaching and the music lifts to become more dramatic. Of course it also plays on the fear of that other "new" piece of technology the motor car, so the combination of these factors would have got a good reaction I would guess. Nothing really to it now but it is still interesting to see how it is structured to achieve its aim and then hits it well.
However the film is nicely done because the cart going by first makes us assume safety before the car is seen approaching and the music lifts to become more dramatic. Of course it also plays on the fear of that other "new" piece of technology the motor car, so the combination of these factors would have got a good reaction I would guess. Nothing really to it now but it is still interesting to see how it is structured to achieve its aim and then hits it well.
The great thing about this film is that these filmmakers, whether they had seen it or not, had the kind of movie that the Lumiere brothers happened to catch in mind - the Train coming in the Station that basically birthed cinema in 1895 - and they decided 'we can do a step further.' Now, it's not that the whole film is only the car coming at the camera, and we first see a horse and buggy go by the "person" sitting or standing in the road. It's a very basic feeling that the crux of this film does - terror - but it also is more primal, which is helplessness.
The whole 1 minute is meant to express a feeling, and whether you really feel it or not (it IS 116 years ago now), it does have a visceral impact: it's hard to not believe the car is going to kill "you" in place of the camera, since we're the camera-eye. This is one of the major accomplishments of cinematic grammar: if you can get an audience to feel something by how the camera is in place and how the frame is set in just such a position (and in this case there's even some odd text that comes over black in the last few seconds), then you win at cinema.
The whole 1 minute is meant to express a feeling, and whether you really feel it or not (it IS 116 years ago now), it does have a visceral impact: it's hard to not believe the car is going to kill "you" in place of the camera, since we're the camera-eye. This is one of the major accomplishments of cinematic grammar: if you can get an audience to feel something by how the camera is in place and how the frame is set in just such a position (and in this case there's even some odd text that comes over black in the last few seconds), then you win at cinema.
Did you know
- TriviaHow It Feels To Be Run Over is based on a very simple premise: a car is driven directly at the camera so that it eventually fills the screen, creating the visual impression suggested by the title.
- Crazy creditsThe intertitle of "Oh my, mother will be pleased" is seen at the end of this film.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Silent Britain (2006)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Каково это, когда тебя переехали
- Filming locations
- UK(location)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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