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Okla-homey
4/20/2007, 07:25 AM
April 20, 1896 : First Vitascope show

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111 years ago today, for the first time, a projected movie is shown as a commercial attraction. Koster and Bial's Music Hall, a vaudeville theater in New York, showed short moving images, using a projector called the Vitascope, invented by Thomas Armat and Francis Jenkins of the Edison Company.

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Vitascope projector

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Vitascope as operated by the projectionist

The Vitascope projector inspired the name of one of the first motion picture companies, Edison Vitagraph Film Company, later called Vitagraph.

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Tom Edison. He gave us commercial electricity, light bulbs, movies and a lot of other cool stuff.

Since that time, there have been a lot of movies, including "Office Space."
Go see a flick tonight witn your sweetie to celebrate this anniversary!

BTW, Here's someone's list of the top ten most important movies made in Oklahoma.

1) Rain Man
1988- Won Best Actor and Best Picture Oscars.

Rain Man tells the story of Raymond Babbitt (Dustin Hoffman), an autistic savant whose brother Charlie (Tom Cruise) "kidnaps" him because their father has left Raymond the family fortune. It's a humorous and touching road trip in a Buick Roadmaster as the two form an unlikely bond.

Watch for the streets of Guthrie when Raymond is taken to a clinic doctor as well as El Reno's Big 8 Motel that "plays" an Amarillo motel in the film.

2) The Outsiders
1983

The Outsiders makes the cut over Oklahoma-native S.E. Hinton's other novel turned Francis Ford Coppola film, Rumble Fish. It's the story of rival gangs, "Greasers" and "Socs," in 1963 Tulsa. Two young boys are on the run after killing a rival in self defense.

Watch for Tulsa's Admiral Twin Drive-In as well as extensive scenes filmed throughout Tulsa including downtown and Tulsa Regional Medical Center.

3) Twister
1996

It's no cinematic masterpiece, but this disaster pic with Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton may be the quintessential Oklahoma film because of the state's prominence in the story. Written by Michael Crichton, the movie about tornado trackers was a box office success.

Watch for the small town of Wakita, Oklahoma where "Aunt Meg" lives, and the University of Oklahoma's Owen Field hides itself well as the site of a destroyed house through which the characters drive.

4) Near Dark
1987

This horror movie about a group of traveling vampires is not exactly an award-winner. In fact, it's rather silly and yet brutal all at the same time. Nevertheless, the Bill Paxton flick has become somewhat of a cult classic.

It's a bit hard to tell you what to watch for here, though, as the majority of the filming was done on Oklahoma roads and rural locations. Can you pick out any Oklahoma locales?

5) Far and Away
1992

Another Tom Cruise movie filmed partially in Oklahoma, Far and Away co-starred Nicole Kidman and was directed by Ron Howard. It was supposed to be the kind of big budget epic that takes home Oscars. Unfortunately, the story of romance during the Oklahoma Land Run received mixed reviews.

Most of the movie was not filmed in Oklahoma. Even the Land Run was shot in Montana, but the Oklahoma Film Commission says there were portions filmed in our state.

6) Phenomenon
1996

This John Travolta with super powers tear-jerker seems to be a love-it or hate-it kind of a movie. After seeing a strange light, car mechanic George Malley (Travolta) suddenly becomes very intelligent, even possessing telekinesis. Everyone wants to know the reason for his change, but George wants to court Jace (Kyra Sedgwick), a single mother new to town.

Watch for various areas in and around Tulsa, one of 10 filming locations for the movie.

7) Elizabethtown
2005

The most recent of the bunch, this Cameron Crowe romantic dramedy largely disappointed critics. Orlando Bloom is a desperate young man who returns to his Kentucky hometown after his father passes away. Falling in love with a flight attendent (Kirsten Dunst), though, can cure many ills.

Watch for the Cherokee Trading Post in El Reno and the Oklahoma City skyline as a backdrop. Guthrie also appears briefly before the OKC National Memorial.

8) The Frighteners
1996

Another critical disappointment, The Frighteners was directed by Peter Jackson who would go on to make the Lord of the Rings trilogy and King Kong. Starring Michael J. Fox, the comedy-horror tells the story of a psychic who finds himself in a mystery when small town inhabitants begin dying mysteriously.

Filmed mostly in New Zealand, Tulsa is the only US location in which the movie filmed, but identifying the scenes is certainly difficult.

9) Dillinger
1973

Starring Warren Oates, Ben Johnson, Richard Dreyfuss and more, Dillinger was filmed entirely in Oklahoma, with scenes shot in Enid, Nash, Ardmore and OKC. OKC's old Midwest Theatre on Harvey (demolished in 1976) served as a Chicago stand-in, and scenes were also shot at the Skirvin Hotel (now being renovated). The scene where Ben Johnson (as Melvin Purvis) talks to the little boy while getting a shoe shine in which the boy tells him he'd rather be Dillinger than a G-man was shot in the Carter County courthouse. If you look closely, there is a signboard advertising Lake Murray and Colvert's Dairy in the background

10) All-American Murder
1992

This campy B thriller directed by Anson Williams (Potsie from The Happy Days) stars Christopher Walken and utilizes the campus of oSu, prominently. In all honesty, it's simply not a good movie.

Watch for the burning body being thrown off the balcony of Oklahoma State's Student Union. Many of the campus house scenes were filmed on the streets around the University of Tulsa campus.

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CUinNC
4/20/2007, 07:41 AM
And then came the 8mm = Pr0n:D

OUDoc
4/20/2007, 07:42 AM
the University of Oklahoma's Owen Field hides itself well as the site of a destroyed house through which the characters drive.


I didn't know that.

King Crimson
4/20/2007, 07:45 AM
i think the Tulsa Rogers High School football field is shown in the Outsiders.

jeremy885
4/20/2007, 09:55 AM
Homey, you forgot this one.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0250244/


Filmed at my home town too.

Okla-homey
4/20/2007, 10:50 AM
Homey, you forgot this one.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0250244/


Filmed at my home town too.

My apologies. I would never direspect Bill Tilghman intentionally. He was among the very greatest lawmen in the history of the West and a great Okie.

TUSooner
4/20/2007, 02:08 PM
Ummm I hate to be persnickety, Tom Edison being Da MAN in every sort of way and one of my all time heroes, but the froggish Lumiere brothers offered a show-for-pay of their short flicks in December of '95.
Just being a friendly neighborhood pain in the ***! :D

Okla-homey
4/20/2007, 03:56 PM
Ummm I hate to be persnickety, Tom Edison being Da MAN in every sort of way and one of my all time heroes, but the froggish Lumiere brothers offered a show-for-pay of their short flicks in December of '95.
Just being a friendly neighborhood pain in the ***! :D

was it a projected movie shown as a commercial attraction, as in, pay money, sit down and watch a movie and that's all the entertainment you get, or a brief curious aside kinda like a halftime show at a theaterical performance? These differences matter man! What's next Mr Chekov? Did Russians actually invent powered flight before our boys Orville and Wilbur?;)

TUSooner
4/20/2007, 04:30 PM
was it a projected movie shown as a commercial attraction, as in, pay money, sit down and watch a movie and that's all the entertainment you get, or a brief curious aside kinda like a halftime show at a theaterical performance? These differences matter man! What's next Mr Chekov? Did Russians actually invent powered flight before our boys Orville and Wilbur?;)
Actually, the Brazilians think it was one of their guys. But what else do they have except soccer, sambas, and sex (NTTAWWT) ? :D