Mess Call (1896) Poster

(1896)

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5/10
Eating And Saluting
boblipton22 January 2020
That's what we see in this early short by James White. As officers and enlisted men wander across the screen in front of the mess tent, one enlisted man eats his meal rapidly while he's walking. Neither does he neglect to salute each officer he encounters, although it's more of a vague wave.

There are a couple of civilians who seem fascinated by the camera. It appears they don't have anything else to do.

Although this short was undoubtedly set up and posed throughout - the private who is intent on his meal never wanders out of screen - the details make it seem realistic.
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Amusing Because of the Reactions of Its Subjects
Snow Leopard2 November 2005
While this Edison feature was originally made in the hope of capitalizing on the popularity of military-themed movies at the time, it turned out to have been entertaining for an entirely different reason. There are a great many early movies (especially the Lumière classics) that feature footage of non-professional subjects to whom the camera itself was a novelty. The reactions of the earliest movie subjects are always of some interest, but especially so here, in that the soldiers show unfeigned curiosity, interest, and excitement about being filmed.

The footage was taken at a New York Militia training camp in upstate New York, and the decision to film at meal time turned out to determine the tone of the footage. Whether it was intentional or not, catching the servicemen while they were at ease gave them the chance to act in a completely natural manner.

While many other movies of the era show the persons being filmed trying hard to look as if nothing special is happening - with perhaps one or two persons in a crowd unable to hold back a reaction - these men make no attempt to hide their excitement. They wave, smile, gesture, and horse around with an innocence that is quite entertaining to watch. They are probably expressing an honest enthusiasm that many others had, but were afraid to display openly, about the earliest movies.
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2/10
Some messing around!
kobe141329 June 2022
William Heise and James H. White shot this short film while at the training grounds of the New York State Militia.

The men do not act passively while being filmed, but instead engage with the camera, giving the film some more energy then of the other short films of the time period.
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10/10
It's as if Denzel Washington's great granddad stars in first comedy . . .
cricket3028 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
. . . ever put to film, in 1896, no less. Miguel and I were mezerized by this 34.48 second flick. We watched it something like six or seven times. It was made at some Army camp during the time the guys still wore those old calvary uniforms like in John Wayne movies for real. Bill and Jim, the directors, must have tolt these soldiers milling around the mess tent to act normal, NO MATTER WHAT DW Sr. Sr. did. So this short opens up with this guy who's a dead ringer for Denzel sipping from a cup of coffee. Though the camera seems to be on a stationary tripod, other guys are walking about in quite a crowd. But old Denzel manages to keep in almost every frame of the film, grabbing a hot dog along the way, executing a coupe de force about-face maneuver toward the conclusion which leaves him all alone centered in the exact foreground of the picture, which apparently is where he'd planned (or had been directed) to wind up all along. Unfortunately, there was no information available on the disk I watched which said how long it took for Jim and Bill to block this all out, or how many takes it took to accomplish this complicated choreography with the deft timing shown in this final product. But kudos to this bunch of guys for putting out the best comedy of 1896 (if not the entire 19th Century).
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