Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The disappeara­nce of an early movie luminary

- By Abby McGanney Nolan

“The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures” By Paul Fischer Simon & Schuster. 416 pp. $28.99

• • • Author Paul Fischer specialize­s in filmmakers who vanish. His well-crafted first book, “A Kim Jong-Il Production,” told the bizarre story of two South Korean movie industry veterans - a director and an actress, recently divorced - who were abducted in the late 1970s and strong-armed into making movies glorifying the Hermit Kingdom.

Fischer’s new book also takes place in a foreign realm, late 19th-century Europe and America, as artists, scientists and engineers raced to figure out how to bring movement to photograph­y. Most of them hoped to make money from this technologi­cal advance. Along with American icon Thomas Edison, there were contenders like Eadweard Muybridge and the Lumière brothers, and lesserknow­n figures like CharlesÉmi­le Reynaud and Louis Le Prince. Two years after making what is now credited by many experts as the first motion picture, Le Prince disappeare­d in France, just as he was preparing to unveil his invention in New York City, his family’s new home. His body was never found.

The tantalizin­g subtitle of “The Man Who Invented Motion Pictures” promises obsession and murder and primes readers for a truecrime thriller. Will it move back and forth, like “The Devil in the White City,” between man’s creative ingenuity and his homicidal capabiliti­es? The prologue ends with a startling theory - that Edison ordered Le Prince’s kidnapping and death.

But the book’s real strength is not its crimesolvi­ng (Fischer concludes with a plausible if not provable suspect); it’s the way Fischer, who is also a film producer, helps us see how revelatory motion pictures were at the time. Le Prince, 49 when he went missing, had studied optics, chemistry, photograph­y and painting, and he made use of them all as he struggled to create a new art form.

Fischer reconstruc­ts Le Prince’s life, the places that meant the most to him and his English wife, Lizzie, and the tussles surroundin­g inventions and patents. One of Le Prince’s major inspiratio­ns came from his work on the then-popular attraction of panoramas, huge 360-degree paintings that were created in a closed circle, enhanced by photograph­y and electricit­y, and filled with customers gazing at life-size representa­tions of historical events. Toiling away in Upper Manhattan and in Lizzie’s hometown of Leeds, Louis figured out how his motion-picture camera and projector could capture a “moving panorama” of real life. He foresaw “the movies” as a collective experience, rather than the individual one offered by the peep-show machine Edison announced in 1891.

Le Prince’s disappeara­nce (and possible murder) cast a melancholy shadow over the book, partly because he seems like such a mensch, even while dealing with endless mechanical challenges, money troubles and an American patent process that was both onerous and unfair. He was adored by Lizzie (whose life and concerns play an important role in the narrative), their children and his inlaws, and warmly respected by colleagues and employees. As one young patent-applicatio­n clerk later remembered him, Le Prince was “the finest, most charming and interestin­g man I have ever met.”

Two other inventors come off less well, though neither’s malfeasanc­e is meaningful­ly connected to Le Prince’s death. Muybridge killed a man in 1874, but he was acquitted because of what the California jury called “the law of human nature”; the dead man had been having an affair with Muybridge’s wife.

Edison, on the other hand, was responsibl­e for murdering many of his competitor­s’ hopes and prospects. Before addressing Edison’s inflated reputation as the father of motion pictures, Fischer describes how the Wizard of Menlo Park had often been denounced by fellow inventors for “underhande­d tactics” and “public dishonesty” as he claimed credit for and ownership of devices that were not his, or not his alone. An already rich and famous Edison is quoted in 1878, “I don’t care so much about making my fortune as I do for getting ahead of the other fellows.”

Fischer shows how Edison and his legal team used caveat petitions filed with the patent office to lay claim to innovation­s “they hadn’t yet formulated but intended to develop in the near future.” (In 1910, one of his lawyers estimated that Edison had filed “some 120 caveats embracing not less than 1500 inventions” in fields ranging from electricit­y to mining to motion pictures.) Fischer details how one of Edison’s assistants, W.K.L. Dickson, did more work than Edison on the Kinetograp­h and the Kinetoscop­e (a moving-picture camera and a display device, respective­ly), and the Black Maria, the first film studio in the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States