Within five years of the Lumières' first public demonstration of their
Cinématographe in 1895, the artistic possibilities of cinema were
being keenly explored by several film pioneers, most notably the former stage
magician Georges Méliès. Unlike the Lumière brothers,
who famously saw no future for their invention, Méliès immediately
realised the possibilities of the moving image as a medium of mass entertainment
and devoted himself to turning out hundreds of shorts that allowed him to
give free rein to his imagination. Charles Pathé and Léon
Gaumont were quick to capitalise on the burgeoning popularity for moving
pictures, creating companies that would make France a world leader in the
new art form. Among the staff of Pathé and Gaumont were such
important luminaries as Alice Guy, Albert Capellani, Léonce Perret
and Louis Feuillade, all of whom would play a crucial part in the development
of what would become the defining art form of the 20th century..
Here are some of the highlights of French cinema from the
1900s.
For a more complete list consult our best films index and complete films index.
Barbe-bleue (1901)
Georges Méliès' first attempt at a film with a conventional
narrative structure is this inspired fantasy based on the famous Blue Beard
story. Among its wilder excursions into the surreal are memorable scenes
in which the villain's latest wife is haunted by the ghosts of his former
victims and an array of giant keys.
Georges Méliès's most famous film was cinema's first brush
with science-fiction, inspired by the lunar fantasies of H.G. Wells and Jules
Verne. A fantastic technical achievement for its time, the film is
replete with dazzlingly inventive images, the most iconic being the one in
which the manned rocket pierces one eye of the Man in the Moon. The
film demonstrates not only its author's unsurpassed visual flair but also
his wild sense of fun. A worldwide hit, it inspired countless imitations
and did much to popularise the new medium of cinema.
Using the technique of multiple exposure to almost ludicrous extremes, Georges
Méliès achieves the seemingly impossible feat of appearing
on screen seven times in each frame, a worthy accomplishment from cinema's
unrivalled illusionist. Via some meticulous splicing, he also manages
to repeatedly rip off his own head and turn these into notes in a musical
stave. The result is one of his most inspired and hilarious films.
Georges Méliès first earned his reputation as a stage magician,
so it is no surprise that conjuring - the art of making objects appear and
disappear as if by magic - would feature in several of his films. Le
Locataire diabolique is the film in which Méliès's conjuring
abilities are used to greatest effect, and the fact that the film is in colour
(each frame was meticulously painted by hand) adds to its immense appeal.
When it was first seen, La Vie et la passion de Jésus
Christ was an incredible achievement, the equivalent of today's blockbuster
extravaganza. Made by Pathé's star directors Lucien Nonguet
and Ferdinand Zecca. the film ran to five reels and was a huge global success.
Influenced by sacred art of the Middle Ages onwards, the film comprises
several marvellously crafted scenes that recount the life and passion of
Christ with a powerful emotional resonance.
The phenomenal success of Le Voyage dans la lune allowed
its director Georges Méliès to attempt an even grander cinematic
exploit. Le Voyage à travers l'impossible
takes all of the elements of the director's earlier lunar fantasy and reworks
them with, even greater artistic bravura and comic absurdity, into a dazzling
piece of film art that still has the power to astound its audience.
One of Pathé's leading lights, Albert Capellani is best known for
his melodramas but he also directed a few excursions into fantasy, the best
being Aladin ou la Lampe merveilleuse. Based on the popular
Arabian Nights tale, this allowed Capellani to experiment
with camera trickery, refining and extending techniques that Georges Méliès
had employed on his films. The result is a cinematic gem that enchants
adults and children alike.
Gaumont's response to Pathé's ambitious La Vie et la passion de
Jésus Christ was an even more stupendously ambitious telling of
the life and death of Christ. This important film consisting of 25
tableaux was the crowning achievement of the great pioneer Alice Guy,
cinema's first female director and producer. In contrast to Pathé's
studio-bound epic, Guy's film uses real exterior locations to complement
the elaborate sets designed by Henri Ménessier.
L'Assassinat du duc de Guise was a crucial film in the development
of film drama and provided the bedrock for much of what was to follow, in
terms of both narrative form and acting style. Running to just over sixteen
minutes, it recounts an important incident in French history - the assassination
of the Duke de Guise in 1588. The film was written by the great playwright
Henri Lavedan, and directed by André Calmettes and Charles Le Bargy,
two prominent stage actors of the period.
In his capacity as artistic director of Pathé's newly founded subsidiary
SCAGL, Albert Capellani adapted several great works of French literature for
the cinema, and in doing so did much to bring into existence the modern feature
film. Based on a celebrated novel by Émile Zola, L'Assommoir
was an incredibly ambitious film for its time, on account of the complexity
of its narrative and the sophistication of its mise-en-scène. What
is most remarkable is how Capellani manages to compress Zola's six hundred
page novel into a taut thirty minute drama without losing the coherence or
dramatic impact of the original literary work.
Gaumont was so impressed by the early work of Léonce Perret that
he was given the challenge of making an ambitious biopic on France's most
important playwright, Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, a.k.a. Molière. Perret
rose to the challenge and with a script supplied by two other key film pioneers
- Louis Feuillade and Abel Gance - he delivered a work of breathtaking artistry.
By using real locations to great effect, Perret endows his film with
a remarkable scale and modernity.
Deux cent mille lieues sous les mers was one of Georges
Méliès's most ambitious films. It originally comprised
thirty tableaux, but sadly much of the film has been lost, although what
remains bears witness to its author's genius. Méliès
presents us with a dazzling collection of underwater life, making this one
of cinema's most fantastic excursions into the realm of pure fantasy.