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Robbery (1897)
 

BFI

Main image of Robbery (1897)
 
aka A Wayfarer Compelled to Disrobe Partially
35mm, 39 feet, black & white, silent
 
DirectorR.W. Paul
Production CompanyPaul's Animatograph Works

An unfortunate man loses more than his wallet when he is the victim of a robbery.

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This R.W. Paul film (also known as A Wayfarer Compelled to Disrobe Partially) is a rather sinister comedy in which a respectable-looking man is forced to undress at gunpoint. The figures are framed in a static medium long-shot, but this simple staging results in a distinctly voyeuristic effect. The obvious and fixed position of the camera turns the viewer into an accomplice, since it forces us to watch the man's humiliation head-on, ultimately aligning ourselves not with the victim but with the thief.

The codes of dress recorded by Victorian cinema are always fascinating. Men, women and children are always seen formally dressed, even when on a rollercoaster, as in A Switchback Railway (d. R.W. Paul, 1898). Clothing was particularly indicative of status in the 19th Century, and although only intended as a comedy, Robbery in fact reveals how the stripping of one's Victorian 'uniform' also meant the stripping of one's integrity.

Christian Hayes

*This film is included in the BFI DVD compilation 'R.W. Paul: The Collected Films 1895-1908', with music by Stephen Horne and optional commentary by Ian Christie.

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Video Clips
Complete film (0:24)
GALLERY / SCRIPTS / AUDIO
SEE ALSO
Footpads (1895)
Switchback Railway, A (1898)
Paul, R.W. (1869-1943)