Buster Keaton, the unbending, unsmiling comedian, is starred in "Forward March," which will follow the successful "Big House" at the Empire--as at present scheduled--on Friday next. The Bioscope, October 8, 1930

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Buster Keaton, the unbending, unsmiling comedian, is starred in "Forward March," which will follow the successful "Big House" at the Empire--as at present scheduled--on Friday next. The Bioscope, October 8, 1930
In England the movie theater was originally called "The Bioscope," because of its visual presentation of the actual movements of the forms of life (from Greek bios, way of life). The movie, by which we roll up the real world on a spool in order to unroll it as a magic carpet of fantasy, is a spectacular wedding of the old mechanical technology and the new electric world. In the chapter on The Wheel, the story was told of how the movie had a kind of symbolic origin in an attempt to photograph the flying hooves of galloping horses, for to set a series of cameras to study animal movement is to merge the mechanical and the organic in a special way. In the medieval world, curiously the one static form for another, in sequence. They imagined the life of a flower as a kind of cinematic strip of phases for essences. The movie is the total realization of the medieval idea of change, in the form of an entertaining illusion. Physiologists had very much to do with the development of film, as they did with the telephone. On film the mechanical appears as organic, and the growth of a flower can be portrayed as easily and as freely as the movement of a horse.
Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man
Listen/purchase: bioscope by rei harakami
Old microscope found! Ooooo
Betty Compson illustrated in The Bioscope, February 24, 1927
A bioscope show was a travelling film projection show, often found at fairs, amusement parks, and variety shows, from the 1890s until the late 1910s. They often had elaborate orchestrions or fairground organs, live opening acts, and energetic barkers drumming up customers from the passersby.
Bioscope - Vanishing Point / video / with Steve Rothery
"How to sidestep what Daddy left you", a review of Imran Hamdulay's film 'The Heart is a Muscle', which releases on 6 March 2026, in South Africa.