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Eadweard (2015)

Eadweard (2015)

GENRESBiography,Drama
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Michael EklundSara CanningChristopher HeyerdahlCharlie Carrick
DIRECTOR
Kyle Rideout

SYNOPSICS

Eadweard (2015) is a English movie. Kyle Rideout has directed this movie. Michael Eklund,Sara Canning,Christopher Heyerdahl,Charlie Carrick are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2015. Eadweard (2015) is considered one of the best Biography,Drama movie in India and around the world.

A psychological drama about the turn-of-the-century photographer Eadweard Muybridge, who was the first to photograph subjects in movement and became the godfather of cinema. He later murdered his wife's lover and was the last British-American to receive the justifiable homicide verdict.

Eadweard (2015) Trailers

Eadweard (2015) Reviews

  • Unjustifiable Homicide of History

    Cineanalyst2017-10-04

    I was excited to see a biopic of (one of) the father(s) of motion pictures, Eadweard Muybridge. A perusal of my other IMDb reviews will demonstrate my interest in the history of the invention of movies. I've already written about the significance of Muybridge's chronophotographic work and projected motion-picture exhibitions to film history on the IMDb pages for "Sallie Gardner at a Gallop" (1878) and for a few documentaries about the man and his work. That's surely part of the reason why I was disappointed by this movie, "Eadweard." As with so many biopics, "Eadweard" has its share of historical inaccuracies, but I can overlook such errors to an extent if they're in the service of making a good or, at least, entertaining movie. Other movies about figures in the early history of cinema have been mostly fiction, but have also been entertaining and, perhaps, have even got at something of the essence of the magic of movies. Two that come to mind that succeed in this way are "Hugo" (2011), about early cine- magician Georges Méliès, and "The Magic Box" (1951), which makes an erroneous claim for William Friese-Greene as the primary inventor of cinema. Both feature some terrific scenes of filmmaking and film exhibition; moreover, those parts in "Hugo," at least, also benefit from actually being relatively historically faithful. So, it could be overlooked that in "Eadweard" a scene shows him projecting photographic motion pictures with his Zoopraxiscope, while in reality, this wasn't the case. Due to a flaw in his projection system, which distorted the images on his discs, Muybridge, instead, projected drawn animations based on his photographs. That way, the images could be drawn in an elongated form that when projected with the Zoopraxiscope distorted them in a way that made them appear in a more realistic form. To the filmmakers' credit, while they screw up this scene at the 1893 World's Fair, they get an earlier scene right when Eadweard projects for his wife a drawn animation of an elephant walking. Also, never mind that the Kinetoscope wasn't at the 1893 World's Fair. Never mind that while the movie portrays Muybridge's exhibition at the Fair as a public failure, he, in fact, was successful enough with his Zoopraxiscope exhibitions to tour back- and-forth across the Atlantic for years with such shows. And, never mind that Muybridge killed his wife's lover, was acquitted for justifiable homicide, and that his wife died years before and a continent away (in the 1870s in California) from when and where he did his locomotion studies at the University of Pennsylvania in the 1880s, which is the time and place that the majority of this movie happens. I get why they messed up the timeline. They wanted the love triangle, adultery, jealousy and murder parts, but they wanted the nude girls of the Pennsylvania studies in the movie, too. It's all titillating stuff… which is why it's especially disappointing and surprising that "Eadweard" is boring. I think the reasons for this failure are partly stylistic and partly because of the bad choices they made in how to depict the history— much of which might've been fixed while simultaneously being more historically faithful. Stylistically, the editing is showy, the score is overblown and there are a bunch of jump cuts and repetitive, ruminating shots that seem to be imitations of "The Tree of Life" (2011). Instead of philosophical musings regarding God and life as in that movie, however, "Eadweard" only offers for its audience's consideration the jealousies of Muybridge's personal life and the pseudoscience of his work. And, I mean pseudoscience—because as much as Muybridge may've argued or flattered otherwise to himself and others, there was little of hard scientific value to his chronophotography, but there was tremendous artistic and cultural value. Another photographer and inventor of motion pictures, Étienne-Jules Marey, was a scientist; Muybridge was not. Muybridge was an artist and a showman. Inexplicably, the filmmakers here went all-in with the pseudoscience, treating it as real science, and missed the golden opportunity to make a movie about art and showmanship, which are subjects more naturally and better transmitted cinematically anyways. The artist Thomas Eakins, who benefited from Muybridge's work, is in the movie, but he's wasted as a pervy caricature for the wife's modeling and the nudity controversy subplots. There are also quite a few flashbacks, which they could've, instead, used to avoid messing up the timeline. Then, they wouldn't have had to have bothered with making up the nonsense subplot concerning Flora, Eadweard's wife, wanting desperately to be a model for her husband's studies—because, remember, she was dead already. And, they could've done better service to Muybridge's earlier chronophotography for kazillionaire Leland Stanford, rather than reducing that part of his life to the apocryphal story of settling a bet for Stanford, which, by the way, the movie doesn't even tell right. I doubt the casual viewer will get that brief reference, and those who will get it, like me, are just ticked off by it because it's inaccurate, and they don't even do the story justice. Most importantly, the flashbacks could've provided character motivation for Muybridge as a man who devoted himself entirely to his work in the present because his personal life turned into such a mess in the past. Thus, there'd also be a starker contrast between personal failure and professional success, instead of the doubled failure that the movie actually ends with by suggesting, again inaccurately, that Muybridge's "science" was stolen and made a mockery of by Thomas Edison for his peepshow box, the Kinetoscope. On the plus side, Michael Eklund looks the part of Muybridge.

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  • Best Picture, 2015 Cape Cod International Film Festival

    prectra2015-10-22

    If you have any interest in the very origins of "moving pictures," find a way to see EADWEARD. The film wins Best Picture at the Cape Cod International Film Festival (24 Official Selections from 316 submissions). Historically accurate, beautifully shot, with wonderful performances. The audience at the Chatham Orpheum sat in silence during - and after - the final credits. A sense of reverence for Muybridge's work. And appreciation for the efforts of the filmmakers. Kyle Rideout and Josh Epstein have been tireless in their efforts to support the film. You all have fans on Cape Cod (East Coast, USA)!

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  • Script, Actors, Cinematography, Everything--Close to Flawless!

    gregg-323872015-02-28

    I just saw Eadweard at its (world?) premier at Cinequest (San Jose CA). It is the first feature-length film by director and co-writer Kyle Rideout, and I was blown away by the quality and polish of everything about this movie. Directors with decades of experience would be hard-pressed to create a movie with as much beauty and narrative force. Eadweard covers the most famous work of Eadweard Muybridge, the 19th-century English photographer who, early in his career, proved that all the feet of a galloping horse do, in fact, leave the ground at one point. The film begins with his meeting his future wife, Flora, a 21-year-old woman captivated by this photographer who was exactly twice her age. At first they had a vibrant life together, but Flora came to feel neglected as Muybridge poured all his energy and passion into his all-consuming project; by its finish, he recorded 781 sequences of animals and humans in motion. Muybridge defied the morality of the day when he eventually insisted that his human subjects be photographed near or completely nude, so as to provide complete records of how the human body works when it is in motion. Two years after they were married, Muybridge fatally shot his wife's lover, who may have been the father of their son Florado. Though the jury dismissed his insanity defense, it delivered an unexpected not-guilty verdict on the grounds of "justifiable homicide" (according to the film, the last such verdict rendered in the history of American jurisprudence). Michael Eklund does a masterful job of portraying Muybridge's forceful, abrupt personality (itself the result of a serious injury earlier in life that probably caused permanent brain damage). The pacing of the film is brisk and sure-footed, resulting in a story that draws you in and keeps your attention. I've never rated anything 10 out of 10, until now. This film is well worth watching, and you will remember it.

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  • Wonderful Film!

    yakster12015-09-28

    Just saw this at our local theatre in Stratford, ON with both Kyle Rideout and Josh Epstein on hand to deliver the print all the way from Vancouver! Wonderful little film that has all of the right elements working for it, script, acting, directing, music and especially cinematography! AND they made it for $150,000. 100X better then most things in theatres today. A real (reel?) gem for anyone who loves film and film history. As I write this there are bigger names trying to get other Muybridge projects off the ground (Cumberbatch, Oldman etc.) but I guarantee they won't have the passion that this has. Sure it has a fairly unknown cast but so did Citizen Kane and Star Wars.

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  • A fascinating look at the man who started it all

    shaykelliher2017-11-03

    I already knew a fair bit about Eadweard Muybridge before I went into this movie and I don't know whether or not that may have given me a slight bias, but this movie was incredible. The film revolves around Eadweard Muybridge (as the title would suggest) the incredibly eccentric "father" of cinema who or more less invented motion pictures. The story was incredibly interesting (to me anyway), seeing them reenact these immortal moments in much the same way that Eadweard would have done was amazing and the story involving the relationship between Eadweard and his wife was also incredibly well done. The film does have a few pacing issues at the beginning, showing us five years of Eadweard's life in as many minutes was fairly jarring but after that, it flowed at a consistent pace. The acting was fairly good for the most part (the worst performance coming from a woman who seemed to be Irish-Australian?) but the show-stealing performance thankfully comes from our lead star, Michael Eklund. The only other thing I've seen Eklund in is Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency and despite not having a large role in it he's very entertaining to watch. I only wish he had more to do in that show because he was phenomenal in this movie. He felt so much like a real person, putting so much effort into making the eccentricities of the character feel realistic. My personal favourite thing about the film was the soundtrack. An interesting use of accordion, washboard, violin and vibraphone gives the entire film a unique feel. The film is a tribute to the man who started it all and I wish more people were aware of it as it deserves much more praise than it's been getting… especially Michael Eklund who was really, really good.

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