A Daring Daylight Burglary

1903
6| 0h4m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 01 April 1903 Released
Producted By: Sheffield Photographic Company
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A thief jumps a fence and removes the shutter from a house. He enters, but a lad who's witnessed the crime runs off to hail the coppers. The first officer on the scene climbs the fence, enters the house, and is soon fighting with the thief on the roof. Falling from the roof, the officer is injured and requires an ambulance. Meanwhile, the thief flees, pursued by more men in blue.

Genre

Crime

Watch Online

A Daring Daylight Burglary (1903) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Director

Frank S. Mottershaw

Production Companies

Sheffield Photographic Company

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
A Daring Daylight Burglary Videos and Images
  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew

A Daring Daylight Burglary Audience Reviews

Bereamic Awesome Movie
Pacionsbo Absolutely Fantastic
Glucedee It's hard to see any effort in the film. There's no comedy to speak of, no real drama and, worst of all.
Chirphymium It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
He_who_lurks This short drama inspired Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" as also did Haggar's "Desperate Poaching Affray." Of the two films, this one is probably better as there is generally more action and it is more involved. It must have been successful when first released.It is easy to see how this inspired Porter's masterpiece. There are several similarities. For one thing, Porter's idea for the fireman to be hurled off the engine obviously came from the part in here where the thief hurls the policeman off the roof. Additionally, it also includes the getaway by train which is not only reminiscent of "The Great Train Robbery", but also of "The Bold Bank Robbery" which was made by Lubin a year later, I believe. Other than this, it is pretty much the typical "thieves try to rob and later get caught" scenario, with a few elaborations.Thus, this film was more of an inspiration than "Desperate Poaching Affray" was. For the time it's pretty impressive with some nice scenery and photography.
Cineanalyst Historian Barry Salt makes some fine points on this one; its fluidity of shots to create exciting action surely do owe much to James Williamson's films, including "Stop Thief!" and "Fire!" (both 1901). In turn, "A Daring Daylight Burglary", in addition to similar British crime chases at the time, such as "A Desperate Poaching Affray", had a significant influence on Edwin S. Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" (1903). British filmmakers, like Robert W. Paul, George Albert Smith, James Williamson and the fellows who made this film, were at the forefront of inventing film techniques and grammar in the beginning of cinema's history.Perhaps, the earliest crime chase was the aforementioned "Stop Thief!" Comparing it to these later incarnations illustrates what the genre did in establishing continuity editing and other film techniques. "Stop Thief!" breaks the rule the axis of action of direction across the screen (a rule not yet invented): when characters exit the frame to the right, for example, in one shot, they enter the next shot at the right, rather than from the left. Williamson may have been imitating the grammar of theatre here, since there was no precedent in cinema. In subsequent films, including the 10-shot "A Daring Daylight Burglary", however, action is continuous by association of shots through continuity editing.The thread from "Fire!" to this film and then to "The Great Train Robbery", with other films in between, is also demonstrated in their "operational aesthetic" (as historian Neil Harris phrased it). Like "The Great Train Robbery", this film presents the violent actions in a straightforward and distant manner because of the aesthetic of showing the details, the operations, of the events. The same sort of curiosity was at work in "Fire!", where the operations of firemen are shown in detail. Thus, we have to see exactly how the injured policeman is taken away before the film resumes with the chase. Two other particular similarities between this film and "The Great Train Robbery" are that they both feature an escape by train, and in a fight scene in each, a substitution splice is used for the tossing of an obvious dummy.
JoeytheBrit This early British film from the Sheffield Photographic company was one of two films that heavily influenced Edwin S. Porter when making The Great Train Robbery - a film which is erroneously credited with creating the narrative film. This film - at five minutes, quite long for its day - depicts, well, a daring daylight robbery, which is witnessed by a conscientious young boy who races to a nearby police station to raise the alarm. The film then follows the police's pursuit of the burglar over rooftops, down hillsides and across rivers, and it all makes for quite an exciting spectacle. I have to say the British were leading the way in the early years of the 20th century when it came to film production. While Edison and Vitagraph were shooting street scenes ad-nauseum, the Brits were coming up with action-packed blockbusters like this.
Snow Leopard This is an interesting early crime/chase drama, and it seems to have been quite carefully made for its time. You can see why the story of the "Daring Daylight Burglary" was one of the better-known pictures of its era. The settings are realistic, and there is a lot of action, with quite a few developments taking place in just a short time. Apparently, it originally had a narration designed to accompany it and explain the action - since the use of title cards was not yet the norm - but even without the narration, it is usually clear enough what is happening, since most of the scenes are pretty well-conceived. The occasional small gaps seem to be physical defects in the film due to its age, rather than flaws in the original. It's a pretty efficient feature, with good story-telling for its era.