Joseph Rosenthal (camera operator)
Joseph 'Joe' Rosenthal was a British camera operator who specialised in filming wars and travel subjects. Conflicts he filmed include the Second Boer War and the Russo-Japanese War. Though preceded as a war filmmaker by some amateurs, film historian Stephen Bottomore has called him the first 'true professional' to film a war.
Early life
Rosenthal was the son of Jewish jeweler and general trader Joseph Rosentall and his gentile second wife Matilda. He worked as a pharmaceutical chemist before he joined the Continental Commerce Company, Edison film agents in London, in late 1897. He had been recommended to its manager Charles Urban by his younger sister Alice Rosenthal, who was the company's sales manager, on account of his knowledge of photography.Second Boer War
The Continental Commerce Company was renamed the Warwick Trading Company in 1898, for whom Rosenthal made short travel and actuality films in the UK, Germany, the Netherlands and South Africa, before Urban sent him to the latter shortly after the Second Boer War broke out in October 1899. Arriving in Natal in January 1900, Rosenthal joined General Roberts's column on its advance to Pretoria. He filmed British troops on the march, fording rivers and taking in Boer prisoners. He kept to records of actuality for the most part, but on one occasion at least, the film A Skirmish with the Boers near Kimberley features obvious staging with the co-operation of British cavalry. Actual conflict was almost impossible to film in any case, owing to military censorship, the limitations of the cine cameras available, and the type of fighting that characterised the war - a combination of long-range rifle fire and the guerilla tactics of the Boer forces. He continued filming up to the surrender at Kroonstad on 12 May 1900 and was present at the raising of the British flag at Pretoria on 5 June 1900, before he returned to Britain.Russo-Japanese War
In August he was sent to film in China, but arrived too late to film anything of the Boxer Uprising, though he did film some street scenes in Shanghai. He did film some incidents in the Philippine–American War, before travelling to Australia to film the opening of parliament in 1901. The following year he made a number of travel films in Canada for Warwick with sponsorship from the Canadian Pacific Railway and made a dramatic film of Longfellow's poem Hiawatha, featuring members of the Ojibwe people. In 1904, now working for the Charles Urban Trading Company, Rosenthal was sent to film the Russo-Japanese War, being based with the Japanese army. His films, particularly those of the siege of Port Arthur, made a considerable impact and were seen around the world. On a number occasions Rosenthal found himself close to enough to the fighting to be in danger himself. As he recorded, when using a kind of shield used by the Japanese to protect themselves from Russian fire:Once a fragment from an exploded shell hit the shield within an inch of my eye-hole, knocking myself, camera and shield over in a heap... On one occasion I took up my station close to a Japanese gun, and spent an hour or more taking photographs of the men as they worked it. When I had finished, I shifted my ground elsewhere, and within twenty minutes a shell from a gun in Port Arthur struck the weapon of which I had been taking pictures... Every man working that gun was instantly killed.
As with the Boer War, all of the films taken by Rosenthal were subject to censorship,. Rosenthal had to submit written reports of the films he had taken, and claimed that on occasion he had sneaked through scenes from the battle front not mentioned in his descriptions, at risk of being court-martialled.