Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

Justus D. Barnes (October 2, 1862 – February 6, 1946), named George Barnes in some sources, was an American stage and film actor. He is best known for his role in the 1903 silent short The Great Train Robbery, which the American Film Institute and many film historians and critics recognize as the production that first established the Western genre, setting a new "narrative standard" in the motion picture industry. Barnes was born in Little Falls, New York. He was a veteran stage actor before he made his screen debut in 1903 in The Great Train Robbery. In that film's memorable ending, Barnes points his pistol at the camera and slowly fires all six shots at the viewer. The Great Train Robbery became one of the most successful and best known commercial films of the early silent era.
8.0David Copperfield
1911
7.0The Great Train Robbery
1903
6.2Nicholas Nickleby
1912
5.0Star of Bethlehem
1912
5.0Joseph in the Land of Egypt
1914
6.6The Portrait of Lady Anne
1912

Mr. Meeson's Will
1915
7.5When the Studio Burned
1913
8.0From the River's Depths
1915
5.0Old Jane of the Gaiety
1915
7.0It Happened to Adele
1917
5.0The Marvelous Marathoner
1915
8.0Cousins
1912
6.5Uncle's Namesakes
1913
10.0When a Count Counted
1912
9.0A Circus Stowaway
1911
10.0Cy Whittaker's Ward
1917