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one-reeler

[ wuhn-ree-ler ]

noun

  1. a motion picture, especially a cartoon or comedy, of 10 to 12 minutes' duration and contained on one reel of film: popular especially in the era of silent films.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of one-reeler1

1915–20; one reel + -er 1
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Example Sentences

The debris left satellites in its path malfunctioning “along the lines of the old Saturday matinee one-reeler,” the 1982 report said.

With such past films as “Step Brothers” and “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” and, more recently the fact-based dramedies “The Big Short” and “Vice,” McKay has proved adept at a form that, in an age of binge-streaming and never-ending sagas, feels as archaic as a Charlie Chaplin one-reeler.

Ken’s project then was “Tom, Tom the Piper’s Son” — a feature-length movie created through the refilming and microanalysis of a 1905 one-reeler.

In 1912, the silent one-reeler Saved from the Titanic was released just one month after the foundering of that unsinkable ship, and starred an actress who had been onboard.

From Time

But there have been many other film versions, including “Saved From the Titanic,” a 1912 one-reeler starring Dorothy Gibson, who had actually survived the disaster and is credited as a co-writer, and a German propaganda film from 1943 that did not please Joseph Goebbels and was quickly banned.

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onerOne rotten (or bad) apple spoils the barrel