Watch the top hatted bloke put a shoulder into the guy's back at 0:16 without even a "pardon me sir". So much for polite Victorian times! Try getting away with that in 100 years time, mate.
yes a bygone era we're just a little in touch with through stories told grandparents by the previous generation - my grandmother took a flight in 1920 and kept the ticket - she said cows looked like mice and cars like beetles!
i like this footage cos of the passing parade - not people all stiffly lined up to be filmed, but going about their business of attending a race day
This is NOT the first film made in Australia - not even the earliest Australian film surviving. Two films of the 1896 VRC Derby were shot by Sestier three days earlier, and one of them was released in the NFSA's video compile "Federation Films" in 1990. For full details refer: "Cinema Papers" No 93, Melbourne, May 1993, pps 34 - 41; and ibid., August 1993, pps 34 -39 & p 62. The first Australian film was of passengers alighting the ferry at Manly, 25 October 1896 - unfortunately not surviving.
Watch the top hatted bloke put a shoulder into the guy's back at 0:16 without even a "pardon me sir". So much for polite Victorian times! Try getting away with that in 100 years time, mate.
Boobdepot1977 1 year ago
hey Boobdepot1977 - yep so many myths about the victorian era - another that people were sexually repressed - just did it less overtly
nickwallacesmith 1 year ago
Where can i view the VRC Derby footage though?
Cheers
James03300330 1 year ago
hey Blenhemshots
yes a bygone era we're just a little in touch with through stories told grandparents by the previous generation - my grandmother took a flight in 1920 and kept the ticket - she said cows looked like mice and cars like beetles!
i like this footage cos of the passing parade - not people all stiffly lined up to be filmed, but going about their business of attending a race day
good to hear from you, nick
nickwallacesmith 2 years ago
A window into another world - no aircraft, no radio, no Australian central government, Queen Victoria still on the throne!
The camera could not have been that noticeable as the vast majority of people in shot ignore it.
Like the way some are engrossed in conversation - if they had only known that people in the 21st century would be watching them.
Blenhemshots 2 years ago
hi AusRadioHistorian
thanks for the corrections - i try to cover so many areas here that i'm obviously an expert in none, almost
and thanks for the references - very nice of you to take the trouble to send them - and i'll be interested in following them up
curious our film industry began with a tragedy
best
nick
nickwallacesmith 2 years ago
This is NOT the first film made in Australia - not even the earliest Australian film surviving. Two films of the 1896 VRC Derby were shot by Sestier three days earlier, and one of them was released in the NFSA's video compile "Federation Films" in 1990. For full details refer: "Cinema Papers" No 93, Melbourne, May 1993, pps 34 - 41; and ibid., August 1993, pps 34 -39 & p 62. The first Australian film was of passengers alighting the ferry at Manly, 25 October 1896 - unfortunately not surviving.
AusRadioHistorian 2 years ago
hi PIPZZZ02
good to hear from you
it does seem from a magical bygone ago of elegance - and i don't think this is just romanticizing the past
glad you enjoyed the post
best
nick
nickwallacesmith 2 years ago
Put this footage next to shots of present-day crowds at race meetings and ask what became of all that beauty and elegance.
It's like a dream.
Thanks Nick.
PIPZZZ02 2 years ago