User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Necessity is the mother of invention
jotix10010 May 2006
"Fortune Seekers" is a delightful short film that pays tribute to the American inventor. As directed by Larry O'Reilly and based on the material written by Frances Dinsmoor, we are given a tour of how a person faced with a challenge raises to meet it and find a viable solution for the problem.

The film concentrates on what appears to be an average man who has a problem opening a jar. He finally comes up with a device that opens it without effort. His wife seems to be delighted by the new discovery, until she puts the gizmo up to the actual test. What worked for him, doesn't work for her! This is an enjoyable short subject film.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"Invention is 10 per cent inspiration and 90 per cent . . . "
pixrox110 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
" . . . perspiration," Old Tom Edison once remarked, according to FORTUNE SEEKERS. This live action short omits the facts about Edison's life, which totally give the lie to his most famous quotation. Among the "inspirations" Edison derived from his fraudulent brains were the ideas that ALL Americans should live in cement block houses (while he was trying to gain a monopoly on cement), B)ALL movies should only be viewed at home (was he working on some man-made Pandemic?) and C)There should be a nefarious Edison power station on EVERY city block spewing out deadly Direct Current (as opposed to Today's much safer alternating current), according to the four DVD set, EDISON: THE MAN WHO INVENTED THE MOVIES. This documentary proves that Edison was the most corrupt, self-centered felonious prevaricating egotist thief in the history of the USA, up until the orange clown now occupying the once-respectable Oval Office. Edison stole ALL of "his" notable inventions, such as light bulbs, the phonograph and movies, from slave wage underlings, and seldom gave these mistreated subordinates ANY credit. FORTUNE SEEKERS promises in its title to give tips about the greed, pernicious chicanery, miserly hoarding, nefarious practices and Satanic pacts necessary "to get ahead" in Corrupt Communist Corporate Conservative America, but fails woefully in delivering such Wisdom!
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
"The application is stamped with the date of its receipt"
boblipton10 October 2020
Did you ever want to make a fortune? You could go mining for gold, dive for sunken treasure, find a stock that will go from pennies to thousands. Or you could invent something like a device to get the lid that's stuck on a jar off, patent it, and wait until the offers roll in.

Me, I run hot water, stick the lid under it for a few seconds, then bang it flat on the counter for good measure. Not the geniuses of this RKO short, who dream up devices after reading a few pages of POPULAR MECHANIX and pay the Patent Office thirty bucks.

Yes, it's the exciting world of patent application. There's some good if overstated humor, and references to successful and unsuccessful inventions of the past, including bobby pins and Lincoln's method of getting a wagon over a stream.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Fun Short
Michael_Elliott1 November 2013
Fortune Seekers (1956)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Entertaining short from RKO takes a look at several inventions that have made people rich. We start off taking a look at stuff like paper clips, bobby pins and other small items before moving onto how one goes about getting an invention off the ground. We see the paperwork that must be filled out, the $30 it takes and the monthly magazine that shows off your creation. We also take a look at some inventions that simply didn't take off as well as a few that might happen in the future (one "possible" future item did eventually happen). Overall this is a pretty entertaining short and a good way to kill eight-minutes. I think the highlight of the film happens during the "what else is there to invent" section where we learn about a hair growth program and it's actually pretty funny. Another highlight happens when we get to see some of the items that were considered for production including a hunting bike as well as a bike that would travel on telegram wires.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed