Mysterious Cafe, or Mr. and Mrs. Spoopendyke Have Troubles with a Waiter

1901
4.8| 0h2m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 21 May 1901 Released
Producted By: Edison Studios
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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As the above title indicates, the scene does not take place in an ordinary restaurant, but one in which all natural rules of order and gravitation are reversed. The couple above mentioned have a most trying experience while endeavoring to partake of a square meal. They find themselves flying about the room from chairs to table, and vice versa, until they are both completely bewildered, ending in a general mix-up, which is sure to provoke much merriment.

Genre

Fantasy, Comedy

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Mysterious Cafe, or Mr. and Mrs. Spoopendyke Have Troubles with a Waiter (1901) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Director

J. Stuart Blackton, Albert E. Smith

Production Companies

Edison Studios

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Mysterious Cafe, or Mr. and Mrs. Spoopendyke Have Troubles with a Waiter Audience Reviews

Konterr Brilliant and touching
pointyfilippa The movie runs out of plot and jokes well before the end of a two-hour running time, long for a light comedy.
Robert Joyner The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one
Jemima It's a movie as timely as it is provocative and amazingly, for much of its running time, it is weirdly funny.
kekseksa This, as other reviewers have pointed out, was one of many filmed that Edison turned out at this time that are simply attempts to copy the work of the French Méliès, who was now gaining an international reputation that would be consolidated by the ground-breaking 1902 film La Voyage sur la Lune, which would be shamelessly duped and shown in the US in 1903.The Canadian reviewer, although perversely he sees it as a reason to praise the films, has absolutely hit the nail on the head when he points out that it is a "fantasy genre" but that the treatment is formally "realistic". And this is exactly why it doesn't work where Méliès' films do. Quite apart from the technical ineptitude with which it is made.The reason this is interesting to observe is that formal realism would become in time an absolute rule of US film-making and one of its greatest limitations. That stylistic straitjacket was not yet entirely in place but one can already see the divergence between the two traditions of film-making. Since the devotion to formal realism was paralleled by an almost equal distaste for "truth", I have somewhere characterised these two traditions(a bit fancifully perhaps)as "Truth perceived within a dream" (European tradition) as opposed to "dream purporting to be truth" (US tradition).Poor Edwin Porter sometimes gets the blame for these miserable films but he had only just been employed by Edison at this time and there's no very solid reason for believing he was involved with them. This particular film was in any case made by Blackton and Smith at Vitagraph but obligatorily marketed via Edison.
MartinHafer In the late 1890s and up to almost WWI, the Frenchman, Georges Méliès, made a huge number of wonderful short films that were significantly better than his competition. Instead of the usual dull 30 seconds to a minute and a half of static filming of mundane subjects (such as the work done by the Lumiere brothers or Edison), his films abounded with great camera trickery and wild stories. This was probably inspired by the fact he was a magician and then a film maker. His work was so popular that soon other film makers copied his films. Some made broad copies in the style of Méliès whereas others copied the films nearly exactly--never crediting the source--though they were invariably inferior films.In this film, a couple go to a sparsely decorated restaurant. Through the use of stop-motion, things appear and disappear again and again, though the action isn't very seamless for this style of film--with many of the scenes appearing jumpy because the actors did not stay in quite their original poses when the camera was re-started. Oddly, the film ended on a very cruel note, as the couple then appeared to beat the waiter to death or at least try to.Because the stop-motion wasn't executed very well and because the subject had been done before (even by the same Edison Company), this one merits a 5.
Cristiano-A This is a trick film, directed by Edwin Porter for the Edison Company. It follows the pioneering work of French filmmaker Georges Méliès, who developed special camera effects to achieve magical results. These effects included stop motion, dissolves, and multiple exposures. The novelty of motion pictures in the early days made these effects extraordinarily entertaining. But this movie is miles away from the ones directed by Meliès. It is not funny, the tricks are bad and the people who saw it and liked it, in the beginning of the 20th century, never had the chance of seeing a film by the Great Magician Georges Méliès.
booyah-1991 In this short film, it is so humorous when the customers sit in the table and the huge anarchy starts when the table keeps flipping over and the chairs keep falling down.This is one of the first comedies to appear on one of the early films made in 190 freaking 1! I enjoy the conflict that is occurring with the waiter and the customers at the same freaking time, ya know?Well, of course, the genre of this short isn't comedy. It is obviously a fantasy genre.But from the looks of the film, it does not look like a fantasy short. It just looks like a realistic short, ya know that I freaking mean?I enjoy this short!8/10