Train Entering Hove Station
A scene from the golden age of rail travel - all the hustle and bustle of a Victorian train station.
1897-09-22 | 1 minutes
Plot Summary
Most movie fans know that the first filmmakers liked to shoot trains entering stations. This example by Sussex film pioneer George Albert Smith illustrates why. The train's rush towards the audience brings movement and visual drama. The flurry of human activity offers plenty for the audience to engage with - who are these people and where are they going? And the time pressure exerted by the fact that the train must soon depart adds narrative tension - will everyone get on and off in time?
Cast
Recommendations
Similar Movies
-
Nómadas
-
Breaking Plates
-
Sir Arne's Treasure
-
Man with a Movie Camera
-
Building the Channel Tunnel
-
The Passion of Joan of Arc
-
The Birth of a Nation
-
Norimono Daisuki! New Tetsudou Special 50
-
Battleship Potemkin
-
Nanook of the North
-
Galileo Galilei
-
Great Balls of Fire!
-
Muurmanin pakolaiset
-
I will make up a song and sing it in a theatre with the night air above my head
-
The Story of the Kelly Gang
-
The Ten Commandments
-
Metro
-
The Life of Moses
-
Berlin: Symphony of a Great City
-
Schindler's List