Table of Contents

Plot
Cast
Production and reception
References
External links

The Haunted Hotel

NameThe Haunted Hotel
Image
DirectorJ. Stuart Blackton
StudioAmerican Vitagraph Company
StarringPaul Panzer
William V. Ranous
CinematographyAlbert E. Smith
Released1907-02-23
Runtime5 minutes
CountryUnited States of America
LanguageSilent

The Haunted Hotel is a 1907 American silent comic trick film written, produced, and directed by J. Stuart Blackton. One of the oldest surviving films featuring animation, it combines live action and stop motion to animate objects.

Plot

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The film starts with an outside view of a small house, obviously a model. The windows and door start moving and the house take the shape of a face. A traveller enters the hotel and things start to move by themselves. A waiter brings the dinner and, on the table, the bread is cut by a knife moving by itself and coffee and sugar are served without human intervention.

A small figure comes out of the milk jug to pour the milk in the cup before returning to the jug. The flabbergasted guest brings out of the jug a napkin which starts dancing by itself and, when he finally catches it, it turns into a sheet. The man finally goes to bed. The room starts turning around. The film ends with a big monster appearing behind the bed and catching into his huge hands the traveler and his blanket.

Cast

Paul Panzer as The Traveller

William V. Ranous as The Waiter

Production and reception

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For the production of The Haunted Hotel, Blackton combined various tricks such as double exposure or objects hanging from wires with the stop-motion process. Vitagraph advertised the film as "Impressive, indefinable, insoluble, positively the most marvelous film ever invented."

The film became such a hit in Europe and in the United States that it gained "a reputation as the first animated picture (...) and the most popular up to that point". The film became the best-selling American film in France and in all of Europe over 150 prints were delivered. Public response in Paris, where Vitagraph had recently opened an office, "was so strong that all the French producers racked their brains trying to figure out the tricks that made objects move by themselves. After considerable difficulty the secret was discovered and the history of cartoons could begin."

Blackton would continue the use of stop motion in The Humpty Dumpty Circus (1908) and several other short films.

References


External links


Category:1907 animated short films
Category:1907 films
Category:1900s stop-motion animated films
Category:1900s monster movies
Category:American films with live action and animation
Category:Short films with live action and animation
Category:American animated short films
Category:Films directed by J. Stuart Blackton
Category:Films set in hotels
Category:American haunted house films
Category:Vitagraph Studios short films
Category:American silent short films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:1907 American films
Category:1900s English-language films
Category:Trick films
Category:English-language short films