Edwin S. Porter is both a pioneer and a director of the movie. He is a pioneer of the movie. Because he enables people to return to the theater and start watching the movie. His movie is also good as they tell stories by editing this movement. As a director, he produced some of the best films in 1902 and 1903. In 1902, he oversaw "the lives of American firefighters" and "heavy train robbery" in 1903. With these two skills, he led a wonderful movie and could use a special shot that was not known at the time.
Film historian Charles Moser praised this as a groundbreaking work in American movies. It is the most innovative in terms of relationships between editors, storytelling and video. Edwin S. Porter is a leading pioneer in the development of early American movies and the life of American firefighters provides an excellent snapshot of the accomplishments of American advanced filmmaking. A few months later, Potter followed "heavy train robbery". Ironically, the "American firefighter's life" later became a controversial topic in the American film history. A few years later, the scholars helped to deny this misunderstanding by reviewing the copyright protection deposit of the original paper of the Congress library.
Thinking to be the first story movie, "Large train robbery" was directed and photographed by Eddie S. Porter in front of Thomas Edison. According to the original of modern standards, the 10-minute action map represents 14 different scenes shot in different parts of New Jersey, designed to represent the West of the United States. The first Western star on the screen, "Broncho Billy" Anderson played multiple roles in a movie including robbery and train passengers. In the last scene of the movie, the audience was surprised to see Gunman watching the gunman directly on the screen ... But Potter suggested to the exhibitor that it could easily be displayed at the beginning of the movie did.