Skip to main content
BFI logo

Home

Film

Television

People

History

Education

Tours

Help

  search

Search

Screenonline banner
Phantom Rides
 

Vehicle-mounted cameras provide a popular spectacle for early filmgoers

Main image of Phantom Rides

Early cinema held an instant fascination with the train, as is evident from the numerous actualities of engines entering and leaving stations, including the famous Lumière brothers film L'Arrivée d'un Train (1896). In the train, cinema found a technology to rival its own wonders, and early train films are often records of one modern technology marvelling at the other. It was a relationship that in a way began decades earlier; through the train carriage window, passengers were offered a cinematic experience years before the emergence of cinema itself. With the 'phantom ride', these two technologies were fused together to produce an all-new cinema spectacle.

Phantom rides were films shot from the very front of moving trains. The films would present the journey from the train's perspective, capturing the approaching track, surrounding landscape and the passage through tunnels. To obtain these films, cameramen would literally tie themselves and their cameras to the buffer of a speeding train. From this position, the film would appear to be moving by aid of an invisible force, hence the name 'phantom ride' by which they soon came to be known. The first phantom ride, The Haverstraw Tunnel, was made in America in 1897. The concept quickly caught on in Britain and would become one of the most popular forms of early cinema.

Since the camera in early films was usually stationary, phantom rides presented a dynamic new style of filmmaking. Although it was the speed, motion and unique perspective that were the primary pleasures of the phantom ride, the films' exotic subjects offered up a secondary thrill for audiences. Early British phantom rides were filmed along local tracks, but filmmakers soon became more ambitious and British cameramen were deployed around the world to film rides through foreign lands. In the same way, filmmakers came from overseas to Britain to record the exotic lands on our own doorstep.

From the safety of a seat in the music hall, fairground or church hall that was the common home of early films, a British viewer could not only observe the world, he or she could also experience the unique sensation of travelling while sitting still. This, we can imagine, would have been particularly exciting when the train headed towards a tunnel, when the viewer would have experienced the thrill of rushing through darkness and bursting into daylight.

As was standard practice at the time, the films would only last a few minutes at most, and would have been part of a programme of similarly short actualities, comedies and trick-films. But in 1906 a number of specialised cinemas, under the banner 'Hale's Tours of the World', opened across Britain, styling themselves in the manner of a train carriage and offering trips to 'the Colonies or any part of the world (without luggage!)' for sixpence. These cinemas took the realism of phantom rides to another level: the benches would shake and the images would be accompanied by the sounds of hissing steam and train whistles. In effect, the Hale's Tour is an ancestor of the sophisticated rides simulating space travel or flight in many fairgrounds and amusement parks today. There were four of these cinemas in London (two of them on Oxford Street), while others appeared in Nottingham, Manchester, Blackpool, Leeds, Liverpool and Bristol.

As early as 1899, the single-shot form of the phantom ride was being edited into multi-shot films. G.A. Smith inserted a single shot of a man kissing a woman in a train compartment into Hepworth's View From an Engine Front - Train Leaving Tunnel (1899), to create the three-shot A Kiss in the Tunnel (1899). The phantom ride concept was soon extended to other forms of transport, such as ships and trams, as in Panorama of Ealing from a Moving Tram (1901). Although single-shot phantom rides continued into the 20th Century, the phantom ride became commonly applied as one technique of many in edited films such as Scenes in the Cornish Riviera (1904) or the excellent A Trip on the Metropolitan Railway from Baker St to Uxbridge and Aylesbury (1910). In the cutting, however, the phantom ride lost some of the intensity of its original single-shot form. All the same, by 1910 the phantom ride was out of step with an ever more complex film style and, perhaps, with less easily impressed audiences.

Christian Hayes

Related Films and TV programmes

Thumbnail image of Arlberg Railway, The (1906)Arlberg Railway, The (1906)

A journey through the picturesque Austrian Alps

Thumbnail image of Canadian Car Ride (1908)Canadian Car Ride (1908)

A train journey through the exotic North American wilderness

Thumbnail image of Kiss in the Tunnel, The (Smith) (1899)Kiss in the Tunnel, The (Smith) (1899)

G.A. Smith's teasing short film about a brief encounter in a railway tunnel

Thumbnail image of Leeds - Views From Moving Tram (1903)Leeds - Views From Moving Tram (1903)

A 'phantom ride' through busy Leeds streets

Thumbnail image of Norway - Hardanger and Geiranger Fjords (1904)Norway - Hardanger and Geiranger Fjords (1904)

An atmospheric boat journey through Norway's magnificent fjords

Thumbnail image of Norwich - Tramway Ride Through Principal Streets (1902)Norwich - Tramway Ride Through Principal Streets (1902)

Fascinating journey through Edwardian Norwich

Thumbnail image of Panorama of Calcutta, India, from the River Ganges (1899)Panorama of Calcutta, India, from the River Ganges (1899)

Early example of an 'exotic' travelogue

Thumbnail image of Panorama of Ealing from a Moving Tram (1901)Panorama of Ealing from a Moving Tram (1901)

A tram's eye view of turn-of-the-20th century Ealing

Thumbnail image of Phantom Ride: Menai Straits (1904)Phantom Ride: Menai Straits (1904)

A train journey through Wales

Thumbnail image of Railway Ride over the Tay Bridge (1897)Railway Ride over the Tay Bridge (1897)

View from the front of a northbound train crossing the Tay

Thumbnail image of Ride on an Express Engine (1899)Ride on an Express Engine (1899)

Train-eye views of approaching track, bridge and tunnel

Thumbnail image of Scenes in the Cornish Riviera (1904)Scenes in the Cornish Riviera (1904)

Fascinating whirlwind tour of the South East

Thumbnail image of Ship at Sea (1898)Ship at Sea (1898)

A vicarious experience of life aboard a ship in stormy seas

Thumbnail image of Tram Journey Through Southampton (1900)Tram Journey Through Southampton (1900)

A startling moving trip through late-Victorian Southampton

Thumbnail image of Trip on the Metropolitan Railway, A (1910)Trip on the Metropolitan Railway, A (1910)

Enthralling journey on an Underground tube train

Thumbnail image of View from an Engine Front - Barnstaple (1898)View from an Engine Front - Barnstaple (1898)

Views of the Devon town, shot from a moving train

Thumbnail image of View from an Engine Front - Ilfracombe (1898)View from an Engine Front - Ilfracombe (1898)

A train ride through coastal Devon

Related Collections

Thumbnail image of DocumentaryDocumentary

Britain's greatest contribution to cinema?

Thumbnail image of Street ScenesStreet Scenes

A fascinating record from British cinema's earliest days

Thumbnail image of The Romance of SteamThe Romance of Steam

How British cinema fell in love with the train

Thumbnail image of TraveloguesTravelogues

How cinema brought the world to us

Related People and Organisations