rollercoasters, 1898 stylee

just found this. mind boggling that footage this old exists in this quality imo. (the sound is fake though)



like how everyone dressed their absolute sunday best at all times back then. however getting off the carriage before it stops is clear health + safety breach though, no need for that!
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Comments

  • The whole thing looks a bit fake to me to be honest. It's all a bit too "sharp". Looking at the background, it's almost as if it's been digitally added to existing footage.

    I could be wrong though, but something just does feel right with that clip.
  • The whole thing looks a bit fake to me to be honest.
    they're not on the moon :)

    the footage has been "stabilised" apparently. Not sure exactly what that means, but I agree the background of the park + people looks a bit odd somehow...

  • edited June 2016
    It was 1898 not 1698. But who knows these days with digital technology, and that sucks if you think about it as anything you watch in theory could be faked very easily even by 'amateurs' with any $300+ PC now. So you have to take it on faith I guess, I personally didn't see anything that jumped out at me apart from how the rollercoaster on the right hand side seemed to be going uphill.
    Post edited by Fizza on
  • edited June 2016
    We is the joy in your hearts. Just accept it. It's wonderful. Bloody paranoids ;)

    It does look weird. It took me a while to work how the car on the right keeps going 'up'. But isn't that a top view of the one on the left. If so that does prove there has been some editing. But why fake it? Are all films fake. Everything is edited etc. I always say all of TV is a lie ;)
    Post edited by Luny on
    Sod it!

    @luny@mstdn.games
    https://www.luny.co.uk
  • Luny wrote: »
    I always say all of TV is a lie ;)
    it is :( just look at all our 60s,70s, 80s celebs, all dirty peados and pervies when they all seemed so nice on tv lol
    Professional Mel-the-Bell Simulator................"So realistic, I found myself reaching for the Kleenex King-Size!" - Richard Darling
  • Luny wrote: »
    I always say all of TV is a lie ;)
    it is :( just look at all our 60s,70s, 80s celebs, all dirty peados and pervies when they all seemed so nice on tv lol

    Going ever so slightly OT.. The desire to constantly be the center of attention, or put another way, a celebrity, is also a narcissistic/psychopathic trait, which while not the only one in and of itself that is the determining factor, is nevertheless a pretty big a red flag, and that end of the pathological spectrum is known to show no empathy or see anything wrong in what would normally be considered outrageous or (put mildly) inappropriate behaviour, such as exhibited by some of the more notorious examples you allude to. They, however, do excel at mimicking the exact type of behaviour that shows them in the best light or show exceptional charm that they use to lure people into their confidence.

    It is said that the vampire is the allegorical manifestation of the psychopathic personality. A vampire drinks the lifeblood of its victim, whereas a psychopath/narcissist feeds on the emotional and mental energy of theirs.

    Anyway.. back to circa 1898 rollercoasters that may or may not be faked..
  • well it's kind of appropriate that this thread should get derailed.

    but let's get... back on track.

  • I'll resist the temptation to post ronan keating - "life is a rollercoaster"


    ughh........must..............resist...........
  • Well safety sure didn't seem to be a concern...open carriages with no restraints and people milling about on the track :))
  • A lot of safety breaches there! The H&S officer would shut them down! :D
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • No one posted this one yet?



    Sod it!

    @luny@mstdn.games
    https://www.luny.co.uk
  • edited July 2016
    The original footage is genuinely that old. It was shot in Alexandra Park, and the short clip was exhibited in early cinemas.

    The angle of the view is deceptive though. Fogging in the distance disguises the fact that the camera is pointing downhill, giving the illusion that the far end of the track is much higher than it is. This one at Folkestone gives you a better idea of how they were built. The two tracks are much more on a level than they appear to be in the film.

    NiceSwitchback1917_608x392.jpg
    As the car arrives on the left, you can see everyone jumping off and guides rushing in to take hold of the car and stop it rolling backwards - it's still on a slope. They push it up higher, the tracks switch it over to the right-hand-side behind the camera, new people get on, then they let it go down the right-hand side. It's just running under gravity.

    At the far end you can see people running out to push it the rest of the way up the slope, and a few of the people that got off have already run around the top of the ramp to the other side to ride it back.
    Post edited by joefish on
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • interesting. yeah the angle on the footage looks weird...
  • I want to have a go. The Drive-In Rollercoaster (1929)

  • You want old and rickety? You should try the old wooden coasters at Clackpool pleasure beach. Some of them go back to the early 1900s perhaps earlier. I went there for a way once and after my hips and mid rift looked like I'd been in a fight with a nasty gang and lost.
    Calling all ASCII Art Architects Visit the WOS Wall of Text and contribute: https://www.yourworldoftext.com/wos
  • I went on a wooden rollercoaster in Orlando. It was horrible, it rattled so much it gave me one of the worst headaches I've ever had that lasted for hours. A friend experienced the same on her visit. I can only assume the vibrations are akin to being repeatedly struck in the head.
  • Is Clackpool anywhere near Skegpool-on-Sea? :-j

    I've been on the wooden coaster at Great Yarmouth and it's worrying how loosely it appears to stay on the track. But the big American ones look terrifying from a safety point of view.
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • I want to have a go.
    Just find somewhere with a lot of old railway bridges like this part of Lincolnshire. That video's just an average trip to the shops here ;)

  • joefish wrote: »
    Is Clackpool anywhere near Skegpool-on-Sea? :-j

    It's in Scarfolk, just up the A1128 from Melchester.
  • I thought it was near Skarsdale? I've heard that town is so tough even the rats carry flick knives?
    Every night is curry night!
  • edited July 2016
    guesser wrote: »
    joefish wrote: »
    Is Clackpool anywhere near Skegpool-on-Sea? :-j

    It's in Scarfolk, just up the A1128 from Melchester.

    And just down the road from the Scarfolk Drop.

    Facebook-69834c.png
    Post edited by leespoons on
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • edited July 2016
    joefish wrote: »
    Is Clackpool anywhere near Skegpool-on-Sea? :-j

    I've been on the wooden coaster at Great Yarmouth and it's worrying how loosely it appears to stay on the track. But the big American ones look terrifying from a safety point of view.

    Rolf. I should have said Cackpool, after looking at the colour of the sea there and what you often find floating in it. Either that or Cesspool.

    Incidentally how does somewhere get the name Skegness? It sounds as bad as it probably was at the end of it's heyday. Skaggyness is what I think of when see that place name, which I am told is not too far off the mark.
    Post edited by Scottie_uk on
    Calling all ASCII Art Architects Visit the WOS Wall of Text and contribute: https://www.yourworldoftext.com/wos
  • leespoons wrote: »

    And just down the road from the Scarfolk Drop.

    Facebook-69834c.png
    haha, that's a bit darkside. took me a second to realise..
  • Scottie_uk wrote: »
    Incidentally how does somewhere get the name Skegness?

    It comes from the Norse word "Skeggi" ("people with beards") and the English word "ness" (headland), apparently it was an early Viking settlement, and the local Anglo Saxons called it Skegness (headland with lots of bearded people) as a warning to avoid the area (because it was full of Vikings).

    Comp.Sys.Sinclair Crap Games Competition 2017
    Everyone has a crap game inside them, let yours out!
  • edited July 2016
    def chris wrote: »
    haha, that's a bit darkside. took me a second to realise..

    It pops up on my facebook every now and then. There's a whole blog of it here: http://scarfolk.blogspot.co.uk/



    GReW wrote: »
    Scottie_uk wrote: »
    Incidentally how does somewhere get the name Skegness?
    It comes from the Norse word "Skeggi" ("people with beards") and the English word "ness" (headland), apparently it was an early Viking settlement, and the local Anglo Saxons called it Skegness (headland with lots of bearded people) as a warning to avoid the area (because it was full of Vikings).

    Not in my dictionary it doesn't...

    Liff.jpg
    Post edited by leespoons on
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • edited July 2016
    leespoons wrote: »
    Not in my dictionary it doesn't...
    Liff.jpg

    You're absolutely right, I can only apologise for using such an disreputable and unreliable publication as the Oxford English Dictionary - they obviously don't devote the same amount of time to research as the fine people at Roger's Profanisaurus ;-)

    Post edited by GReW on
    Comp.Sys.Sinclair Crap Games Competition 2017
    Everyone has a crap game inside them, let yours out!
  • GReW wrote: »
    It comes from the Norse word "Skeggi" ("people with beards") and the English word "ness" (headland), apparently it was an early Viking settlement, and the local Anglo Saxons called it Skegness (headland with lots of bearded people) as a warning to avoid the area (because it was full of Vikings).
    Erm. More likely 'Skeggi' ('bearded one') was the folk name of the leader of the first settlement in the area. i.e. it's 'Skeggi's headland'.

    There's a lot of places around there with 'thorpe' in the name too. That's from 'torp', which refers to an outlying farm several miles from a town. So they're all named after whoever owned the farm, e.g. Malbert's Farm -> Mablethorpe.
    Joefish
    - IONIAN-GAMES.com -
  • I think that describes Sittingbourne quite well.
    The local developers keep saying "It's Here!", we keep saying "It's Where?"
    They keep saying "It's the Spirit of Sittingbourne!" we keep saying, yup it's dead and and full of drunks, charity, coffee and empty shops.
    Sittingbourne... don't make eye contact with the locals and never stay for more than 180 days.
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