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             The Mechanical Statue and the Ingenious Servant 
            Also known as The Mechanical Statues in the USA : [The Mechanical Statue] 
            (1907) United States of America 
            B&W : [?] Split-reel? / 450 feet 
            Directed by J. Stuart Blackton 
            Cast: (unknown) 
            The Vitagraph Company of America production; distributed by The Vitagraph Company of America. / © 17 January 1907 by The Vitagraph Company of America [H89462]. Released 19 January 1907; in a split-reel. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format. 
            [?] Comedy? 
            Reviews: [Variety, 26 January 1907, page ?] This is a posed picture, showing the workshop of a sculptor. A customer purchases a rather good piece of handiwork, a statue which dances when wound up. Removing it to his home, a servant starts it moving and runs away. After powdering his face from a flour barrel the servant takes position upon the pedestal in an attempt to deceive the master of the house. The discovery of the deception is the finale, bringing to a close a moderately funny series, with a deal of the humor lacking through the obvious employment of forced comedy. — Sime. 
            Survival status: (unknown) 
            Current rights holder: Public domain [USA]. 
            Listing updated: 10 December 2024. 
            References: Slide-BigV p. 175 : Variety-19070126 p. ? : Website-AFI; Website-IMDb. 
            
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