Grandma's Reading Glass (1900) Poster

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7/10
The screen snaps back
des-4724 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The British film industry may have had its ups and downs since but in the pioneer days of cinema the UK stood alongside the USA and France as one of the most important centres of film making. Louis Le Prince shot the earliest known moving images in and around Leeds in 1888, while Bristol-born photographer William Friese-Greene patented his ultimately unsuccessful Chronophotographic movie camera the following year. Robert W Paul and Birt Acres shot the first British film, using a camera pirated from Edison's, early in 1895, about the same time the Lumières began their experiments in Lyon.

Friese-Greene worked on his invention from a studio in Brighton, which a few years later became the centre of a cluster of cinema pioneers, most notably George Albert Smith, who contributed numerous technical, formal and storytelling innovations to the evolving art of film. Though Grandma's Reading Glass might seem simple and innocuous today, it's highly remarkable for its time.

In the beginning films were single scenes shot from the same angle throughout. This is one of the first to have been edited together from several different takes using different camera angles at varying distances from their subjects but made to look like it takes place in a single coherent space and time frame. This is so commonplace today we're unlikely to think twice about it, but it's a big conceptual leap and Smith guides the audience through it in a particularly interesting way.

While his grandmother fiddles with her sewing basket, her grandson borrows her magnifying glass to look at various objects — a watch, a caged bird, a cat, grandma's eye. Each time, the film cuts to a presentation of the object enclosed in a circular mask, clearly intended to represent the view through the glass. The film is sometimes cited as the first to use closeup (though not all the viewed objects are shown in closeup); it's certainly one of the founding documents of the point-of-view (POV) shot, linking the images logically together through the performers' eyelines and actions.

The circular mask or vignette is inherited from magic lantern slides and graphic art where it was also used to frame detailed depictions of faces and smaller objects. It became a regular part of the visual vocabulary of early cinema, developing an animated offshoot, the iris-in and iris-out. For decades after such tricks went out of fashion, masking continued in use, as here, as shorthand for POV shots through restricted apertures — periscopes, binoculars, keyholes (even though the real experience of looking through these things is nothing like the sharp-edged cinema version).

This is also an early example of reflexive film making, reminding us that viewing a film is itself an act of looking. The most striking closeup is grandma's eye: disturbingly separated from the rest of her face, it still looks scary, particularly when hugely magnified on a big screen. Though the character is depicted as nothing more than mildly irritated, the eye startles and seems angry, as if it's just appeared unexpectedly on the other side of a keyhole. Its appearance is almost an act of visual violence, like the screen hitting back.

Later films self-consciously mined reams of dark Freudian scopophilic significance from images of eyes, lenses, mirrors and the act of looking. Smith is more innocent, and doesn't seem to appreciate the eye's power — he leaves us with a view of a cute kitten instead.
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6/10
The Gang's all Here
JoeytheBrit1 June 2009
There's quite a little gang forming in these comments for films-so-old-that-no-one wants-to-watch-them-apart-from-a-few-die-hards. Apart from me there's Bob and Alice and the wonderfully informative Cineanalyst, and every now and then Plankton drops by to moan about how dull it all is. Hey-ho. Grandma's Reading Glass is notable today for its early use of 'point of view' shots, as we see through the eyes of a young boy looking through a magnifying glass. It's also an early example of extreme close-up as we're treated to a shot of Grandma's eyeball rolling about wildly for a few seconds. As Plankton has commented, given that the likes of Melies were already creating dynamic films filled with trickery by 1900, this all seems a little tame.
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7/10
This new century starts with an innovation (web)
leplatypus10 October 2016
For me, this 5th year of baby cinema welcomes its first steps to get up : all the previous movies were static in the sense that the camera was still, motionless. Here, it's always the case but at least we have different frames. We can conclude that editing is born with this new millennium as audience has now different points of view. This change of shots is particularly imaginative here as it's done trough a magnifying glass and thus we alternate seeing a boy with his grandmother sit at a desk and the examined subjects : a glass, a watch, a bird, Grandma's eye, a cat… What's striking for me is that once again, it's like watching a Lynch movie : it's a bit surreal, but visually stunning as the vision is pure, classic and close to daily life while looking in another dimension…
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A Playful & Innovative Little Feature
Snow Leopard24 May 2004
This little feature is both playful and innovative, with an idea that allowed plenty of room for creativity. Most of it simply shows a young boy playing with "Grandma's Reading Glass", and as simple as the idea is, it opens up a new realm of possibilities. This picture must have been one of the very earliest, if not the earliest, to experiment with different points of view in such a way.

Even aside from the innovation, it is also generally interesting to watch in itself. At least one of the boy's uses of the reading glass leads to a pretty unusual sight. Even the more commonplace images still do a reasonable job of bringing out the spirit of jaunty experimentation that characterize both the technique and the content of this pleasant little film.
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4/10
Through the looking glass
Horst_In_Translation20 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
In this 1900 short film, we have a boy who takes his grandmother's reading class and looks through it at several objects. The filmmaker actually experimented a bit with that idea as we see everything from the boy's perspective, including several animals, but also Granny's eyes in a closeup which is a witty little inclusion as these eyes usually look through the glasses. The director of this 80-second short film is George Albert Smith again, one of Britain's first filmmakers, but this is not among my favorites of his films I have to say. It's a nice little play on camera perspectives, but story-wise it could have been better in my opinion. Not recommended.
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3/10
Even Enlarged, There's Not All That Much
Hitchcoc12 May 2019
A series of views of things through a magnifying glass. None is all that interesting because size doesn't make any difference. The only feature is the circular pictures that we see, so we know it is Grandma's magnifier.
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8/10
Invention Of The Point-Of-View Shot
boblipton25 April 2019
A young boy looks at various things through his grandmother's magnifying glass.

When people speak about innovation in films, the process of adding new shots that would eventually lead to modern film grammar, few people mention George Albert Smith. This stage hypnotist, magic lantern exhibitor and film maker was born in 1864. He entered film-making in the late 1890s and almost immediately began directing films that clearly investigated camera techniques that are still used more than a century later. He imported techniques from the magic-lantern shows, produced films that demonstrated the impact of close-ups and, with this film, was an early adopter and innovator in the point-of-view shot.

Later on, he would move to the more technical side of the industry. In concert with Charles Urban, he would develop Kinemacolour, the first really successful color film. He died in 1959.
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3/10
sweet little film for 1900, but an amazingly dull curio when seen today
planktonrules15 September 2006
This is one of those dull little films that impressed audiences in the 1890s but today seems very dull and dated. Grandma and her grandson are using her magnifying glass to look at stuff. They look at each other and they look at the cat. Nothing particularly interesting or compelling. It just goes to show you that life in the "Gay 90s" must have been pretty boring!! Today, despite the film's brevity, I can't imagine anyone but a die-hard Cinephile enjoying this clip. I am a history teacher and film lover, but I STILL found this pretty tedious and uninspiring. At the same time this dull stuff was being made, the French director/actor/producer Georges Méliès was making some very innovative films with actual plots, sets and amazing camera tricks. Seek out his stuff instead.
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POV Close-Up Parade
Cineanalyst7 March 2008
In my comments on "As Seen Through a Telescope", I said that I preferred it to this film, "Grandma's Reading Glass" (which was made the same month and year and by the same director), because this film is merely a parading of point-of-view (POV) close-up shots of supposedly magnified things. The story is: a boy looks through a large magnifying glass (his grandmother's reading glass) at various objects, including his grandmother's eye. The set is primitive and the tight camera framing makes it seem small. The shadows make it obvious that it was made at an open-air stage.

"As Seen Through a Telescope", however, has a single POV close-up that functions within a narrative. And, its fictional story takes place outside. An analogy that seems somewhat appropriate is that "Grandma's Reading Glass" is like the modern-day special effects blockbuster that neglects further insight and compelling plot. Looking at a remake of each film further illustrates this point. Biograph's "Grandpa's Reading Glass" (1902) serves the same purpose of this film: to thrill with its novel trick. "The Gay Shoe Clerk" (1903), Porter's version of "As Seen Through a Telescope", however, is less of a clone; its setting and even its close-up is presented from a different perspective--the more standard one rather than a POV. George Albert Smith made at least one more POV close-up film in 1900, "Spiders on a Web", which is only a one-shot film of spiders (but, oddly, no web).

Regardless, "Grandma's Reading Glass" is noteworthy as an early example of POV close-ups inserted within something of a narrative. By 1900, story films of multiple shots still weren't the norm and had only recently come into existence. Film editing was only about five years old.

Another thing on a historical note: there's been some controversy surrounding the author of this film, but there shouldn't be. Some, although it would seem lacking sufficient evidence, have claimed that Arthur Melbourne Cooper made this film and a few other films attributed to Smith. This controversy originated from Melbourne Cooper himself, who made such claims to his daughter, Audrey Wadowska. Tjitte De Vries has recently argued the Melbourne Cooper claim. On the other end, Stephen Bottomore and Frank Gray, in the journal "Film History", have gone a long way to discredit these claims. Nevertheless, MOMA has attributed their copy of the film to Melbourne Cooper and the Wikipedia website (as of this date), among other places, is full of unfounded claims for Melbourne Cooper in their section on him.

The evidence for Melbourne Cooper, as of now, is entirely based on, at best, secondhand accounts originating from the memory of a now deceased man, and more likely originating from his faulty memory, or, at worst, his self-aggrandizing lies. Very little is known for certain about Melbourne Cooper's early film-making career, and his entire career isn't very well known, either; on the other hand, Smith's surviving financial records have made his film-making career probably the best documented of early British filmmakers. Concerning this film, Bottomore (in "Smith versus Melbourne-Cooper: An End to the Dispute") has pointed out that there's no documentation of an association between Smith and Melbourne Cooper, that the Warwick Trading Company grouped this film with other uncontested Smith films in its 1900 catalogue, and that the Charles Urban Trading Company credited Smith as the author of this film and others, contested and uncontested, in their 1903 catalogue. Moreover, the little boy in this film is probably Smith's son, Harold, who also appears in uncontested Smith films. The same tabby cat with a ribbon in this film probably appears in uncontested Smith films, as well. In addition, Smith's financial records reveal that he had the equipment--the camera masks--to make the POV close-ups. De Vries even admits now that "As Seen Through a Telescope", which demonstrates the same unique feature, was made by Smith.

G.A. Smith was one of film's most important pioneers. In addition to the POV close-up insert shot in these 1900 films, he helped introduce many developments in editing and camera placement within early story films, as well as some trick effects and a color cinematography process. In many respects, his films were the most advanced at the time--even surpassing those made by more acclaimed contemporaries Edwin Porter and Georges Méliès.
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9/10
A little-acknowledged milestone in film history.
the red duchess22 December 2000
This is the first film to make sustained use of point of view shots. A small boy picks up his granny's magnifying glass, and looks at various items through it, the newspaper, a cat etc. The film in itself is utterly charming: the little boy with the huge glass, the grandmother in her nannyish Victorian clothes, the tiny, overstuffed room all contrive a surreal, Alice-like atmosphere, which is very English in its exaggerated normality. and the young boy's discoveries, his making the world strange by looking with someone else's eyes, is delightful, explaining logically why the last thing he sees is his grandmother's eyes (birth of Godard!).

This making strange the familiar is, again, surreal, but it is also what the cinema does, and what the cinema had largely been doing since its invention, photographing the everyday, workers, families, trains etc., but making them marvellous. The difference being that these things were marvellous, not in themselves, but because of the medium, because they were moving pictures, because people had never seen themselves, or people like themselves in such an art form before. That novelty soon wore off, hence the move towards narrative, fantasy, comedy, genre.

The point of view, however, suggested a new avenue altogether. where early films were shot with a calm, detached, effacing distance, its framing belonging ostensibly to no-one (whatever ideologies such objectivity implied), the point of view took the image, or narrative, from outside the frame within it, breaking it up as it were, creating two levels of looking - the audience looking at the fiction, and the character in the fiction looking at something. The inviolability of the image is shattered, is no longer objective - 'reality' exists at two removes. We don't see an unmediated image anymore, we have to ask about the state of mind of the looker. Subjectivity is born, paving the way for German Expressionism, 'Citizen Kane', 'Vertigo', the monuments of the medium.

Smith cannily understands this- the point of view here is deliberately distorted, a young person looking through the glass of an older person with poor sight. The image is heightened, almost unreal. The camera and the distorted glass become the same thing, objectivity dies. Hoorah!
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Interesting for the device utilised to convey "point of view"
bob the moo24 February 2008
I watched this film on a DVD that was rammed with short films from the period. I didn't watch all of them as the main problem with these type of things that their value is more in their historical novelty value rather than entertainment. So to watch them you do need to be put in the correct context so that you can keep this in mind and not watch it with modern eyes. With the Primitives & Pioneers DVD collection though you get nothing to help you out, literally the films are played one after the other (the main menu option is "play all") for several hours. With this it is hard to understand their relevance and as an educational tool it falls down as it leaves the viewer to fend for themselves, which I'm sure is fine for some viewers but certainly not the majority. What it means is that the DVD saves you searching the web for the films individually by putting them all in one place – but that's about it.

As with his Kiss In the Tunnel, British pioneer George Smith (an English name if ever there was one!) again works with the devices possible with the camera for telling the audience what is happening. Here it is the "point of view" technique where the screen is seen through a circular frame that makes the viewer understand that this is the view from the character's eye. It is a simple device that is not used any more because of how obvious it has become but at the time this was cutting edge stuff because these techniques were not developed and the audience was being told what this meant.

Substance wise the film is again like Kiss in the Tunnel in so much as, when the technical interest is put to one side, there isn't much else to be had from it. Still, worth seeing as part of learning more about why Smith should be a name that is mentioned alongside the work of people like Lumière.
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great
Kirpianuscus12 June 2020
First - for modern spirit, for reminding the roots of cinema, for lovely simplicity and for the return to fascination about George Albert Smith, giving the spirit of magic lantern show as seed for film art. Seductive like an old letter , it is the fine definition of the profound meaning of cinematograph in the circle of magic.
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An Important Landmark in Film History
Tornado_Sam3 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This early G. A. Smith film is important for a variety of reasons: it uses closeups, which didn't yet exist at the time; it uses masking, to make the closeups appear as though they are being viewed through a magnifying glass, which is what is supposed to be happening here; and they are POV closeups or Point Of View shots to boot. Of course, being groundbreaking in so many regards all at once, the premise of the film lacks story and gives itself over to merely experimenting with POVs and masking. It is thus more significant for its structure instead of narrative purposes, and would later be elaborated on by D. W. Griffith, who developed further complex storytelling in his movies of the 1910's.

The setup is that of a grandma and her son, Willy, looking through a reading glass at numerous things magnified. Such a premise allows room for plenty of experimentation and cutting, by incorporating numerous closeups through circular masks that feature various things within the long shot (or medium closeup in this case). Sandwich ads, a bird in a cage, an eye and more are all featured within the minute this film runs, each a breakdown from the long shot that precedes it. Basic experimentation to be sure, but quite revolutionary and a technique that was later experimented even more by Smith in "As Seen Through a Telescope" and "The Sick Kitten", two shorts which were more focused on a single action rather than a rapid succession crammed within one minute.

"Grandma's Reading Glass" was also quite clearly very popular in the day, as it was the subject of a remake two years later - the Biograph short "Grandpa's Reading Glass". That film also utilizes the same closeup shot of the eye that has made it a landmark today, but tends to largely differ from the other various closeups featured in the original.
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Thanks Grandma
Michael_Elliott5 August 2015
Grandma's Reading Glasses (1900) ** (out of 4)

This film from George Albert Smith features a young boy looking at various objects in his grandmother's glasses. This of course magnifies the objects for the movie viewer to enjoy. You can watch a film like this and understand why people in 1900 might have been entertained by it. With that said, there's very little here to keep a modern viewer interested and even those film buffs such as myself who love these early movies will find very little here. The optical effect really isn't all that impressive and nothing he's "seeing" is that that interesting either.
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