DCSIMG
 
 

Georges Méliès Movies

Georges Méliès, the most significant creative artist of very early motion pictures, was born the third son of a wealthy Parisian bootmaker. After a stint in the French Army, Méliès went to London to apprentice in the shop of a friend of his father's. Méliès' English was poor, so he began to take refuge in the Egyptian Theater, an establishment run by the English magicians Maskelyne and Cooke. By the time Méliès returned to Paris in 1885, he was hooked on magic and determined to become a conjurer himself.
At first, Méliès attended to his father's factory equipment, but, in 1888, the elder Méliès retired, and Georges sold his interest in the family business in order to buy the long-abandoned Theatre Robert-Houdin in Paris. In December 1895 he was invited to attend the first screening of the Lumière Cinématograph and was determined to have one for his own theater. The Lumières weren't interested, but Méliès obtained a pirated Edison projector through R.W. Paul in London. Through studying this machine, Méliès and a mechanic named Lucien Koster built a motion picture camera of their own, and Méliès made his first films in May 1896, establishing himself as the Star Films brand with Koster as partner. In Méliès' 70th short film, The Vanishing Lady (November 1896), he stopped the camera deliberately in order to replace a woman behind a veil with a skeleton. This film literally represents the very birth of special effects photography in motion pictures. Méliès had a name for it, truc d'arrêt, or artificially arranged scenes.
In December 1896, Méliès made the first horror film, The Devil's Castle. Already many of Méliès' key elements are in place; a huge bat turns into Satan, a beautiful lady emerges from a smoky cauldron, ghosts and witches frolic about. In March 1897, Méliès completed construction of a movie studio, the first in Europe. He then embarked on making reconstructed newsreels of news events in addition to his magical subjects. One such "newsreel," The Dreyfus Affair (1899), was laid out in 12 scenes and may have been the first film to maintain a single story line over several shots. Also in 1899, Méliès began to add hand-painted color to special subjects and by the end of the century had attempted to make sound films. By 1901 he was utilizing editing to tighten scenes and punch up effects; Méliès was way ahead of his American colleagues in this regard. Méliès used specially built platforms to create the illusion of enlarging objects (The Man With the Rubber Head, 1901), in-camera matting to create multiples (The Music Lover, 1903), created superimpositions, built sophisticated models, such as an exploding volcano in The Eruption of Mount Pelee (1902), and developed countless other technical innovations. However, the true magic in Méliès' films was their charm; his use of dancing girls and acrobats as fairies and demons, his eye-popping hand-painted scenery, fashioned after the manner of late 19th century illustration, and his own whimsical star turns as Satan, wizards, aged professors, scientists, and the like.
In 1902, Méliès made A Trip to the Moon, destined to become his best-known film, though not his personal favorite. Through its great popularity, Méliès learned that his films were being duplicated illegally in the United States. Méliès began to copyright his films in America and established an office for Star Film Company in New York City under the supervision of his brother, Gaston Méliès. Georges Méliès' films were particularly popular in the United States and in Britain and exercised a vast amount of influence on early American and British filmmakers. In 1904, Méliès made his masterpiece, Le Voyage à travers l'impossible (The Impossible Voyage). Told in 40 scenes and lasting 22 minutes, it was both the longest and most complex narrative film of its time.
In 1905 Méliès began to feel the heat from local competition. His films were typically shown at his own theater in between live magic acts, and they were distributed better internationally than any other French films of the era. But in France, Méliès' bread and butter was in the carnival and fairground cinemas set up in temporary structures. Competitors such as Léon Gaumont and Charles Pathé were building movie theaters in the suburbs that were intended as permanent fixtures, and Méliès was hard-pressed to compete against this new wrinkle in the industry, as the overhead on his films was incredibly high. In 1908, Méliès signed up with the Motion Pictures Patent Trust in the United States, and in order to meet their standard of "one reel a week" he had to put his own pace of production into such high gear that he could barely keep up with it. In 1908 alone, Méliès equaled his entire 1896-1907 output in terms of overall running time. By 1909, Gaston Méliès had stepped into the breach and began producing Westerns in the United States, taking the pressure off Méliès having to produce so many films. But there was a new problem at home; that year, Charles Pathé introduced a measure that restructured the pricing on films in a way that put the fairground cinemas out of business. Georges Méliès then took a needed break from filmmaking that lasted nearly two years. Upon his return in 1911, the industry had drastically changed, and Pathé distributed Méliès' final films. Charles Pathé viewed Méliès as a carny who was always putting the cause of "Art" above that of commerce, and who didn't know the value of a franc. Pathé had Méliès' final productions, such as The Conquest of the Pole, whittled down from feature length to less than half their running time. When Méliès complained and wanted out of their agreement, Pathé consented, but insisted on full repayment of all advances against production costs.
Méliès was effectively finished as a producer of films, though World War I kept his creditors at bay for a time. By 1925 he had lost his property, his studio, his theater, and his family. Méliès' wife had died just before the war, so he remarried to Jeanne D'Alcy, an actress from earlier days. Together they eked out a miserable existence working in a kiosk at a railroad station. In time, Méliès was rediscovered and hailed by the Paris Surrealists as a pioneer surrealist artist. By the time of his death, Méliès' basic needs were met, and something of his reputation, and self-esteem, was restored.
Georges Méliès was the first master filmmaker. Though most of his films are a century old and counting, they still serve as a source of delight and wonder. At their first revival in 1929 only eight Méliès films could be found of the 512 subjects he made; in the year 2001, through the worldwide cooperation of film collectors and archives, more than 200 titles are extant and more are being found. Each new title found is of unique interest, as no filmmaker in history had more to say about demonology, mythos, and the spirit world than Georges Méliès, the father of cinematic horror, fantasy, and science fiction. ~ David Lewis, Rovi
1997  
 
French filmmaker Georges Méliès might well be termed "the granddaddy of modern special effects." In the late 19th and very early 20th century, with the medium of cinema still fledgling and nascent, Méliès used crude technical means to pioneer such devices as time-lapse photography, fade-ins, fade-outs and multiple exposures - decades ahead of his time. As directed by Jacques Meny, the 1997 documentary The Magic of Méliès reflects on the extraordinary career of this often-forgotten craftsperson, via clips from the handful of his films that are still extant, an eye on the major events of the director's life, and detailed explanation of how he achieved the various effects. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

 Read More

 
1978  
 
A portrait of the pioneer of special effects in cinema. ~ Rovi

 Read More

 
1913  
 
Melies examines the facets of love, betrayal and revenge in this short, silent film. ~ Rovi

 Read More

 
1912  
 
This entertaining story of a race to the North Pole, with contestants using fantastic air vehicles. ~ Rovi

 Read More

 
1910  
 
Of the 13 films produced by Melies studios in 1910, only three are known to exist. Alas, Out for Mischief remains one of the ten "lost" films. The mischief in the film was perpetrated by two children, a boy and a girl. According to contemporary reviews, the kids spent much too much time plotting their deviltry and far too little time executing it. The film's biggest laugh was delivered by a crotchety "old maid," who at the end of the film removed "her" makeup and costume, revealing a handsome young man underneath. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1910  
 
The Shadow of Death made one of his rare screen appearances in this Melies "trick" film. Dressed in his traditional black shroud and bearing his customary scythe, Mr. Death stalks the earth in search of victims. Some of the scenes depicted herein were quite strong stuff for 1910, despite the film's fantasy trappings. According to the critic for Variety several moviegoers expressed the wish that they had remained at home. One suspects that In the Mission of the Shadow was not quite as aesthetically pleasing as Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal, which also "starred" Death. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1910  
 
The Cowboys and the Bachelor Girls was a rare Western from the Paris-based Melies studios. It all begins as five Eastern girls set up camp in the West, insisting that they can take care of themselves, without any men in their lives. Immediately smitten by the ladies, five cowboys decide to win the girls' hearts by proving that they do need men after all. A more straightforward effort than one might expect from the Melies firm (which usually trafficked in "trick" pictures), The Cowboys and the Bachelor Girls was enthusiastically received by its target audience. Unfortunately, it is now considered a lost film. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
Melies' Mr. and Mrs. Duff was distributed on the same reel as The Count's Wooing. An exercise in down-and-dirty slapstick, the film establishes early on that Mr. Duff lives in mortal terror of his overbearing spouse. Deciding to walk out on her, Duff is struck by a car and brought back home, where he endures even more abuse from the belligerent Mrs. Duff. Desperately, he asks his father to come to his rescue, advising the old man to bring a shotgun along. The film ends as both Mr. Duff and his father are beaten senseless by Mrs. Duff, who has recently taken up boxing for just such an occasion. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
Like his other eight releases of 1908, George Melies' Stolen Witness is no longer in existence. The plot gets under way as two young men battle for the affections of a pretty mademoiselle. When war is declared, one of the suitors marches off to the battlefield, while the other becomes a war correspondent. When the soldier is entrusted with an important message, the correspondent -- still bitter over their romantic rivalry -- seizes an opportunity for revenge. The correspondent steals the message and hands it over to the enemy, resulting in a bloody counteroffensive. The two men are reconciled when both land in a field hospital -- where, by an extraordinary coincidence, their mutual sweetheart is serving as a nurse. Stolen Witness was released in the U.S. through a collaborative arrangement between Edison and Biograph. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
Melies' Seeing Things was typical of the "trick" films in which the company had specialized since 1900. A drunk wanders home late one evening, whereupon he experiences a vast and frightening array of hallucinations. Specifically, the poor man "sees double": two doorknobs, two keyholes, two clocks, and worst of all, two wives. The basic "joke" in Seeing Things is established from the outset, and thereafter is stretched rather than developed. Fortunately, it was a good joke, and the special effects were up to Melies' usual eye-popping standards. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
A Tumultuous Honeymoon was a surprisingly pedestrian effort from the usually innovative Melies film factory. Already ticked off because his daughter wants to elope, a cantankerous farmer vents his spleen on an unfortunate tramp. Escaping the farmer's wrath, the tramps steals a pile of clothes, only to discover that they've been abandoned due to smallpox. Reduced to wearing a barrel, the tramp has an inspiration when he passes a clothesline full of women's clothing. All this leads to a slapstick wedding sequence, with the tramp, wearing women's apparel, being mistaken for the farmer's eloping daughter. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
After several disappointingly conventional reels, Georges Melies returned to his old form with this trick-filled fantasy. His head filled with stories of buried treasure, a young man decides to search for hidden riches himself. He grabs a shovel and digs deep, deep, deep into the earth, where he finds a subterranean cave populated by tiny elves. Impressed by the hero's bravery, the elves allow him to claim their treasure, an enormous chest filled to the brim with gold. According to contemporary reports, Fortune Follows the Brave was color-tinted by hand; alas, no prints are known to exist. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
Georges Melies' releases on behalf of the American-based Motion Pictures Trust were nowhere near as inspired as his turn-of-the-century classics. Unable to care for all her children at the same time, a widow sends her two youngest children -- a 5-year-old and his infant brother -- into the streets for a brief walk. Soon thereafter, the older boy trades his baby brother for a wagonload of toys. The woman who entered into this bargain realizes that, once he is made aware that human beings shouldn't be bought or sold, the 5-year-old will demand his brother back. A generous soul, the woman gives back the baby and also allows the boy to keep his toys -- which delights his older siblings and brings the film to a happy denouement. Like Melies' other 1909 releases, For Sale, a Baby apparently no longer exists. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1909  
 
The Count's Wooing was originally released back-to-back with another Melies film, Mr. and Mrs. Duff. Though her father demands that she marry a count, the heroine is in love with a handsome young American. Hoping to dispose of the troublesome count, the American and his pals cook up a scheme. Before long, the timorous nobleman is besieged by a band of "Cowboys and Indians," not to mention a motley collection of lunatics and "wild women." The count summons the police, at which point all of his tormentors suddenly vanish. Upon arriving home, the girl's father refuses to believe the count's explanation as to why there are cops all over the place; he kicks the count out on his ear, clearing the path for the marriage between his daughter and her resourceful American sweetheart. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1908  
 
Of the 19 "trick" films produced by the brilliant Georges Melies in 1907, only seven are still extant -- and The King's Jester, alas, was not one of them. According to contemporary accounts, the story concerned a grotesque jester who used magic to outfox a despotic king. As always, the special effects were top-drawer, defying anyone in the audience to figure out how they were accomplished. It is possible that the film was released theatrically in a color version, tinted by hand. Unfortunately for Melies, The King's Jester, like most of his films, was sold outright to distributors rather than rented, meaning he received only a tiny fraction of the profits. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

 Read More

 
1906  
 
"Satan's Laboratory" and "The Haunted Kitchen" are the featured pieces about two men who make a purchase from the Devil. ~ Rovi

 Read More