IMDb RATING
5.1/10
427
YOUR RATING
A re-enactment using actors of the recent coronation of Britain's King Edward VII.A re-enactment using actors of the recent coronation of Britain's King Edward VII.A re-enactment using actors of the recent coronation of Britain's King Edward VII.
- Directors
- Star
Photos
Paul Méliès
- Attendant Bearing King Edward's Sword
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFinanced by a British company, this is one of the first co-productions of the history of cinema, if not the first ever.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cinema Europe: The Other Hollywood: Where It All Began (1995)
Featured review
Elaborate fakery with authentic "book-end" footage
The earliest 'newsreel' films were in fact fakes: re-enactments produced in a studio, with (usually amateur) actors impersonating the public figures, and often ludicrously bad stage effects to simulate fire, flood and other forces of nature. 'The Coronation of Edward VII' is one more such fake, but is notable for being a much more elaborate production than others of its kind ... and is also notable because it's a 'pre-enactment' of a real event, having been filmed BEFORE (rather than after) the actual event it purports to depict.
The synopsis of this movie (elsewhere on this IMDb site) is both an accurate rundown of the film and also an accurate recounting of the coronation ceremony itself, being so heavily ritualised as to be more or less scripted. However, the fakery is obvious to modern viewers and was probably obvious even to unsophisticated film audiences of the time. 'Westminster Abbey', as seen here under the harsh and flat studio lighting, is clearly a painted set. The actors cast as H.M. Edward VII and his consort Queen Alexandra -- amateurs supposedly chosen for their physical resemblance to the real figures -- are obvious fakes. The actor playing the king is too thin, and his beard is too small (the real Edward VII, after decades of soft living, was quite heavy-set indeed when he finally succeeded to the throne). The actress playing Queen Alexandra looks nothing like her, and is too heavy. Worse luck, the (fake) Archbishop of Canterbury and the other priests are garbed in robes which look more appropriate for a French Catholic mass than for an Anglican service.
Filmmaker Georges Melies and his (American-born) British producer Charles Urban made considerable effort to have this film shot, edited, printed and shipped to exhibitors in time for Coronation Day, so that audiences who couldn't watch the actual event would be able to witness this enactment simultaneous to the actual coronation! On Coronation Day, Urban set up a Bell & Howell camera outside Westminster Abbey and shot authentic footage of the royal carriage arriving for the coronation and departing afterward. This footage -- genuine newsreel -- became book-ends, spliced before and after Melies's faked footage of the coronation. So, audiences who saw this film after Coronation Day were at least able to witness some authentic footage at the beginning and the end.
More for the effort and ingenuity put into it than any historic value, I'll rate this movie 7 out of 10.
The synopsis of this movie (elsewhere on this IMDb site) is both an accurate rundown of the film and also an accurate recounting of the coronation ceremony itself, being so heavily ritualised as to be more or less scripted. However, the fakery is obvious to modern viewers and was probably obvious even to unsophisticated film audiences of the time. 'Westminster Abbey', as seen here under the harsh and flat studio lighting, is clearly a painted set. The actors cast as H.M. Edward VII and his consort Queen Alexandra -- amateurs supposedly chosen for their physical resemblance to the real figures -- are obvious fakes. The actor playing the king is too thin, and his beard is too small (the real Edward VII, after decades of soft living, was quite heavy-set indeed when he finally succeeded to the throne). The actress playing Queen Alexandra looks nothing like her, and is too heavy. Worse luck, the (fake) Archbishop of Canterbury and the other priests are garbed in robes which look more appropriate for a French Catholic mass than for an Anglican service.
Filmmaker Georges Melies and his (American-born) British producer Charles Urban made considerable effort to have this film shot, edited, printed and shipped to exhibitors in time for Coronation Day, so that audiences who couldn't watch the actual event would be able to witness this enactment simultaneous to the actual coronation! On Coronation Day, Urban set up a Bell & Howell camera outside Westminster Abbey and shot authentic footage of the royal carriage arriving for the coronation and departing afterward. This footage -- genuine newsreel -- became book-ends, spliced before and after Melies's faked footage of the coronation. So, audiences who saw this film after Coronation Day were at least able to witness some authentic footage at the beginning and the end.
More for the effort and ingenuity put into it than any historic value, I'll rate this movie 7 out of 10.
helpful•60
- F Gwynplaine MacIntyre
- May 14, 2007
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Reproduction, Coronation Ceremonies: King Edward VII
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime4 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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Top Gap
By what name was The Coronation of King Edward VII (1902) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer