Directed by Edwin S. Porter and George S. Fleming for the Edison Manufacturing Company, Jack and the Beanstalk (1902) is one of America's earliest surviving narrative films. Spanning roughly ten minutes, it utilized groundbreaking trick photography and special effects to bring the classic fairy tale to the screen.The film was heavily inspired by the wildly popular Victorian stage pantomimes of the era. To inject humor, the filmmakers tweaked the original story by introducing a comedic, "burlesque" cow—played by two men in a cow suit—that dances and capers before being traded for the magic beans. It is also celebrated as a major step in the evolution of cinema, as Porter used sequential continuity editing to link shots across the film’s eight to ten scenes, transitioning between them with crossfades or fades to black.
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