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A Roadside Inn

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Wikipedia article




'A Roadside Inn' (, literally "The Hotel for Traveling Salesmen, or the Results of Being Very Drunk") is a 1906 French short silent film by Georges Mlis. It was sold by Mlis's Star Film Company and is numbered 843845 in its catalogues.

Mlis plays the drunk hotel guest in the film, which uses stage machinery, pyrotechnics, and substitution splices for its effects. The distinctive film set, divided in two parts to show two rooms, is similar to one Mlis employed in his later film 'Tunneling the English Channel' (1907).

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