The first film adaptation of Frankenstein was shot in Thomas Edison's studio
Here is a vintage horror gem for your mid-week blues: Back in 1910,
when he wasn't coming up with civilzation-changing inventions, Thomas
Edison lent his studio in the Bronx out to filmmakers.
While the Edison Company began with "actualities" (newsreels, real-life
events, etc.), the studio eventually turned to fiction. And, perhaps
not surprisingly, science fiction. One of the company's productions was
the first ever film adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein,
directed and written by J. Searle Dawley. Clocking in at about twelve
and a half minutes, it must have been one of the more ambitious projects
to come out of Edison's studio and features some dangerous-looking
pyrotechnics.
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