The Little Train Robbery

1905
The Little Train Robbery
5.5| 0h10m| en| More Info
Released: 01 September 1905 Released
Producted By: Edison Studios
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

In this parody of 1903's "Great Train Robbery", also made by Edwin S. Porter, young bandits rob the passengers of a kiddie train and are chased by police officers.

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Cast

Director

Producted By

Edison Studios

Trailers & Images

  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew

Reviews

He_who_lurks Edwin S. Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" met with great success, being the first western and one of the first 'full length' (by the standards of the time) movies. So, two years later he thought to parody it, by changing the bandits to children who commit crimes. Thus, "The Little Train Robbery" was made. While the idea is clever at least, there is no medium closeup of the bandit firing at the camera at the end and because of the lack of this, it has not become nearly as well known.If you've seen the original movie before then you're probably already familiar with the plot: a train is robbed, bandits are caught. The thing isn't even much of a western at all like the original because of the lack of violence (no gun shots are fired and the closest they get is one kid hitting the engineer over the head) and a great deal of it is devoted to the chase scenes, which go on a little too long. It isn't a bad film by any means but lacks the action and attention-holding pacing of its predecessor. Worthwhile for fans of "The Great Train Robbery", but if you haven't seen that yet then you'll have to watch it before giving this one a go.
MartinHafer Edwin S. Porter made one of the most important early films "The Great Train Robbery". Some have referred to it as the first full-length film, though Georges Méliès made his "Voyage Dans Le Lune" the same year and a couple other films also claim to be the first. Regardless, it was a huge milestone in film history and was the first great American western. So, it's not at all surprising that Porter would seek to capitalize on this success--though I am surprised it took him two full years to get to "The Little Train Robbery"."The Little Train Robbery" is a parody of his previous film--and it IS unusual for a person to parody their own work. In this case, you have a similar plot but it's acted by kids. And, as they are kids, they ride ponies and the train is an amusement park type they'd have for the young kids. It's a clever idea BUT it's also an idea that runs thin--even when full-length meant 10-20 minutes as it did in 1905. In many ways, it's a lot like the much later (and dreadfully awful) "The Terror of Tiny Town"--the first all-midget western! So is it worth your time? Not especially. But, if you love early films and have already seen "The Great Train Robbery", it's worth a look.
cricket crockett Thomas Edison's Motion Picture Company is remembered primarily for two things: 1) ripping off the competition whenever possible (done best today by TV's SciFi Channel, but pioneered as a profit-maximizing technique by light bulb inventor Edison), and 2) suing the competition for ripping YOU off (for which Edison's film company was particularly notorious; while point #2 seems on the face of it to be in conflict with point #1, Edison hired the finest legal minds of his day, and they knew that under the American legal system, the litigant with the most money wins 99 percent of the time; if that party also is the most ballyhooed, the victory rate is upped about another percentile). However, occasionally Edison's henchmen contributed other innovations to the film industry, as is the case with THE LITTLE TRAIN ROBBERY (1905). Herein, the Edison crew pioneers the idea that if sex and violence is the top seller for the grown-ups, why not hook the young 'uns on the same while their tender brains are being formed and wired? This worked, of course, which is why modern cinema is as it appears today.
Snow Leopard In spoofing his own hit movie, Edwin S. Porter produces a fairly creative parody that is worth seeing in itself, and that is perhaps even more interesting in historical terms. "The Little Train Robbery" is a re-working of the classic "The Great Train Robbery", with all the characters changed to children, and most of the settings miniaturized accordingly.The story often parallels the original quite closely, and the more familiar you are with the original, the more similarities you can spot. So this is more than just one of the era's common remakes of the one-shot films that had become popular - it involved a detailed look at the original movie, with many choices as to how closely to follow it. It is certainly one of the most detailed examples of this kind to be found in the first decade or so of cinema history.There are also times when, in contrast to the original, details are changed to play up the fact that the characters here are all children. As such, it is interesting in terms of the age-old debate as to how far behavior, especially of the young, might be influenced by the movies. Attitudes always change from one era to the next, and not always in the same direction. Attitudes in past eras were not always as simple as we may assume them to have been, and this is the kind of example that provides an interesting perspective on the issue.Seen simply as a movie, this is not one of the best of its era, but it has some clever features, and it still works well enough. To the audiences of the time, to whom "The Great Train Robbery" would have been one of the very best movies they had ever seen, there would probably have been noticeable interest in this parody version.