Lone Fisherman (1896) Poster

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4/10
Gag
boblipton22 January 2020
A local yokel - you can tell by the rough-woven straw hat he wears - sits down by the edge of the water with the fisherman's usual equipment: a fishing pole and a bottle of beer. He may be a lone fisherman, but he's not alone, in this simple gag comedy.

It's directed by the rightfully despised James White, but this is not utterly despicable for an era when a film ran for 45 seconds, and so there is no time for elaboration on a joke. It's interesting that there is an observer to the gag, but that's about the limit of it.
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6/10
If you think itz hilarious to see someone drown . . .
cricket305 February 2013
Warning: Spoilers
. . . then LONE FISHERMAN may be your cup of tea. While some previous reviewers allege that this short is a staged prank, it is actually the oldest surviving example of the infamous "snuff" film genre. I viewed all 44.56 seconds of it four times with Dean, and he agrees with me that an actual drowning is filmed here. Nowadays someone who takes pictures of someone else in a precarious position instead of helping them to safety gets into trouble. (Just ask that cell phone picture taker who got castigated for the New York City subway station incident last month.) But apparently old Tom Edison and his cameramen could get away with anything back in the day--they electrocuted an elephant, with flames shooting from the feet, for darn sake! The cameramen here no doubt are in cahoots with the "prankster" who dumps the unsuspecting fisherman into the river. Only too late does the prankster realize his victim is drowning and jump in himself (which dousing would be incomprehensible if the fisherman were in on the gag, too). When the prankster comes to shore empty-handed, a horrified expression on his face, the cameramen quickly cram the lens over their crime accessory, which would be called "obstruction of justice" in the present day. What is a real shame is that the Edison people not only were crass enough to release this carefully sanitized version of the tragedy to the public, but they were proved correct in their thinking that people of the 1890s were so naive about the motion picture medium that they would never suspect anything was amiss with the LONE FISHERMAN film. As they say on CSI all the time, there is no statute of limitations on murder, but all involved in this peccadillo probably have joined their victim on the other side of the river by now.
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4/10
Not so lone fisherman
Horst_In_Translation12 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
He wishes he was maybe. As he sits there in silence fishing in a relaxed manner, a prankster slowly approaches and pushes him into the water, so he can really meet the fish down there. Interestingly enough both of them wear sombrero-like hats, a pretty unusual sight even if everybody back these early short films was wearing hats. Anyway, as the action continues, a carriage approaches and those inside stop to see what's going on. Next thing, the prankster proves he can also take it himself as he jumps into the water deliberately and joins his victim. Lots of action for under a minute and a mediocre, not really funny very early comedy with tome interesting aspects though.
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Interesting For Its Cultural Context
Snow Leopard9 August 2005
Viewed in isolation, this short feature is only mildly amusing, but its cultural context makes it more interesting. It was not, as it might first appear to be, footage of an isolated practical joke, but rather was a movie version of a scene involving a popular character from a well-known stage musical of the late 1800s, Edward E. Rice's "Evangeline". The play and the character have both long since been forgotten, with this short movie one of the few surviving reminders of either.

Although Rice's play was suggested by Longfellow's poem of the same name, the character of "The Lone Fisherman" was added solely for the stage, and appeared nowhere in the original poem. (The entire play seems to have borne very little resemblance at all to the poem.) Rice introduced the character of the fisherman as a quirky feature to his production, and the character became rather popular for a time. This film version thus shows one brief scene involving the character, which audiences of the time probably enjoyed seeing.

The majority of the short movies from the 1890s contain straightforward material that is still easily identifiable, even if it is clear that they come from a different time. This is a rather interesting exception, in that though what actually happens on screen is clear enough, its cultural context is now forgotten, making it appear to be something a bit different than it was originally.
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Candid camera precursor
PeterJordan25 February 2003
Long before the days of You've been framed and Candid Camera, someone in the Edison company had the brilliant idea that staging of practical jokes on unsuspecting victims and the filming of the proceedings and reaction would make for great comic entertainment. And they were right, in this offering, wherby the fisherman sitting on the plank out over the riverbank falls victim to the fulcrum effect when a joker sneaks up and removes the stone weighing down the other end of the plank. Of course, like all such opportune clips, the excessive padding on either side of the actual focal event contribute little extra to the entertainment value of the piece, as in this piece when a couple passing in a cart stop to join in, in laughing at the unfortunate victim
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Funny Edison Film
Michael_Elliott1 May 2011
Lone Fisherman (1896)

This comedy from Edison is pretty funny even if it lasts just under a minute. A fisherman is sitting on a plank on a bridge when someone comes up from behind him and removes the stone. This causes the fisherman to fall off the blank and right into the water below. That's pretty much the entire story here but it's actually pretty funny and especially the reaction of the fisherman once he's in the water. I must admit that I found the prank to be pretty funny and I certainly liked the reaction that the guy gave as he starts flopping around in the water. This "acting" was certainly over-the-top but that's what made it work so well. Edison would eventually make quite a few prank movies so it appears they were popular back in the day and for a good reason. The camera stays put on dry land and just catches all the action in front of it including the prankster himself jumping into the water as a couple other people ride up and laugh at the action going on.
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