The Bold Bank Robbery was released on July 30, 1904. Distribution was handled by Lubin Manufacturing Company and the
Kleine Optical Company. The advertisement offered the film for purchase at the price of 66 dollars, along with a free
Victor Talking Machine if one were to purchase two other films. An advertisement for the film in the
New York Clipper declared that
The Bold Bank Robbery was "the most sensational film ever made." '', which marked the first time a film had been promoted in the magazine. When the film was shown in theaters, it was played alongside a
phonograph, a device used to record and replay audio. However, the audio was often not synchronized with the action, perhaps because the projectionists still had to operate the machines by hand. It received a positive review from a writer for the American newspaper
The Victoria Advocate, who branded it as a film that "everyone should see." Adversely, author Jay Leyda, writing for
Film Quarterly, criticized the film for being "obviously derivative." In 1904,
Edwin S. Porter directed a film entitled
Capture of the "Yegg" Bank Burglars, distributed by
Edison Studios. Filmed in August and September of that year, the film features a group of robbers who execute a heist. Porter had been motivated to produce it by
The Bold Bank Robbery. A man from
Belleville, Ontario, who held screenings of
The Bold Bank Robbery and paired it with other films in the crime genre, once screened the films at a fair. The man was surprised by the ovation received from the audience, writing that "The applause was something amazing. I really thought the grandstand had collapsed." The film has survived; a print of
The Bold Bank Robbery is preserved in the
Library of Congress film archive. The film is now in the
public domain. ==References==