A Trip Down Market Street Before the Fire

April. 21,1906      
Rating:
6.9
Trailer Synopsis Cast

A Trip Down Market Street is a 13-minute actuality film recorded by placing a movie camera on the front of a cable car as it travels down San Francisco’s Market Street. A virtual time capsule from over 100 years ago, the film shows many details of daily life in a major American city, including the transportation, fashions and architecture of the era. The film begins at 8th Street and continues eastward to the cable car turntable, at The Embarcadero, in front of the San Francisco Ferry Building. It was produced by the four Miles brothers: Harry, Herbert, Earle and Joe. Harry J. Miles cranked the Bell & Howell camera during the filming.

Reviews

Karry
1906/04/21

Best movie of this year hands down!

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ReaderKenka
1906/04/22

Let's be realistic.

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Intcatinfo
1906/04/23

A Masterpiece!

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Crwthod
1906/04/24

A lot more amusing than I thought it would be.

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leplatypus
1906/04/25

This short documentary has been shot weeks before the terrible quake! And after it, others shot the same path: you can find on the web edit movies with the 2 frames side by side to compare before / after the quake! they say they are synchronized but i doubt it: street lamps are after the quake! What is striking is that we barely see the Ferry building on the end of the street: dust, fog or bad quality, i can't say? Also after the quake, there is much more people outside on the street... But this trip movie has a lot of legends: shot 6 days before, Frisco was full of cars while i understand it was much earlier and in fact there is much less cars that it seems because the cars keep circling around the camera. At last, it's pity: i started my coast to cast american trip here but i don't think i did this travel because my cable car was in a downhill road while here it's completely flat...

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Horst in Translation ([email protected])
1906/04/26

There is really no better way to summarize this little movie other than by what the title says: "A Trip Down Market Street Before the Fire". Of course you could add that it is San Francisco and that this film was made shortly before the disastrous earthquake hit the Californian city. This movie had its 110th anniversary already a couple weeks ago and as such it is obviously a black-and-white silent film. City documentaries were a thing back then and I find it somewhat funny how people sometimes stop and look at the camera. Other than that, it is pretty much what you would expect life to look like shortly before the outbreak of World War I. An okay movie from the documentary perspective, but really only worth checking out for silent film enthusiasts. The lack of a plot may bore everybody else.

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gavin6942
1906/04/27

From the front of a cable car, a motion picture camera records a trip down Market Street, San Francisco, California, from a point between 8th & 9th Streets, Eastward to the cable car turnaround at the Ferry Building.Maybe it was cheating, but I watched this with sound superimposed on top of the picture. It made it more entertaining, to be sure. But regardless, this is an incredible film. We know some of it was staged, but it still shows a busy city street in 1906. The clothes, the horses, the beards... this is a priceless document of history.Apparently there is some debate on exactly when the film was made, but it does seem to be not long before the earthquake. Maybe a week, maybe more. But the exact date does not change the fact it captured San Francisco in its prime.

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tieman64
1906/04/28

"A Trip Down Market Street" is an eleven-minute short film shot from a cable car as it journeys down Market Street, San Francisco. Shot days before the great earthquake of 1906, the film consists of a simple POV shot taken from the car as it journeys in a straight line, slowly prowling a city that bustles with activity.The street itself is expansive, packed with pedestrians, a few old fashioned automobiles, trucks, horses and buggies. With no apparent traffic lights, lane demarcations or highway codes, and with everyone dodging and weaving their way through the commotion, it's amazing that no accidents occur.Needless to say, watching the film today is like hopping into a time machine. The formal fashion, body language, architecture, hairstyles, beards, hats, clothes, storefronts and advertisements on display are all interesting. Eerily, the hundreds of men, women and children whom we observe with curiosity are themselves observing us with interest, for they have clearly never seen a movie camera before, which in their eyes must seem like an odd, alien thing.As the film was shot just days before the great quake and fire of 1906, an incident which nearly destroyed San Francisco, the film has a somewhat sad, haunting quality. Or rather, we imbue the film with a sense of loss.8/10 - Film archivists Rick Prelinger and David Kiehn are responsible for uncovering, investigating the origins of and restoring the film.

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