Really cool - François Ier et Triboulet movie (The King and the Jester).
Movie Premier in 1907.
Color Info: Black and White
Countries: France
Genres: Short
Sound Mix: Silent
In movie played:
Georges Méliès (actor)
Articles: "Variety" (USA), 26 January 1938, "Stop Camera Pioneer Discoverer, Melies, Dies Broke in Paris", "New York Times" (USA), 23 January 1938, pg. 9:2, "Georges Melies; French Motion Picture Producer a Pioneer in Industry", "Variety" (USA), 16 October 1909, pg. 13:1, "Melies' Suit [against the Motion Picture Patents Co.] Near Trial", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 2 October 1909, pg. 444, "George Méliès's Scenario Contest", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 25 September 1909, pg. 409, "Georges Méliès's Scenario Contest", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 21 August 1909, pg. 250, "The Méliès Competitions", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 25 May 1907, pg. 188, "Burglars Break in and Steal"
'D.W. Griffith' (qv) said about Melies, "I owe him everything.", 'Charles Chaplin' (qv) said he was "the alchemist of light.", His grave is situated in the Père Lachaise cemetery (Paris, France), He built the first movie studio in Europe., Is regarded as "The Father of Special Effects.", He was the first to use production sketches and storyboards., On December 28, 1895, he was a member of the first audience in the world to see the Lumiere brothers' Cinematographe., He tried to buy Cinematographe equipment from the Lumieres but they refused to sell to him. He got into the film business by buying a projector from R. W. Paul and buying a Bioscope camera., His first films, like those of the Lumieres, were simple life scenes which he added to the program at his theatre, the Theatre Robert-Houdin. He later filmed scenes of himself doing magic tricks., Melies worked with two engineers at his theatre workshop to build a camera of his own. The first prototype weighed over 75 pounds., While shooting one of his life scenes in the Place de l'Opera in Paris, the camera jammed. It took about a minute to clear the problem and resume shooting. When the film was processed and screened, Melies saw a bus suddenly turn into a hearse; people in the scene suddenly appeared or disappeared. This accident led to his discovery of stop motion trickery which became his first filmic special effects technique. This stop motion technique had previously been discovered and used by Edison, but Melies made extensive use of it in his short films., He considered the United States such an important market that his company had an office there. Many of his production sketches and storyboards were captioned in English as well as French., By the time he left film production, he had created over 500 films., When he discontinued film production, Melies himself reportedly destroyed the original elements of most of his films., The Theatre Robert-Houdin was closed in 1914 as a result of World War I. This sent him into bankruptcy., The French surrealist movement of the 1920s brought about a rediscovery of his surviving works., The recognition by the French surrealist movement led to acknowledgement of his contributions to the art and industry of the motion picture. A search was conducted for him and he was discovered operating a Kiosk at the Gare Montparnasse where he was selling candy and toys., The rediscovery and recognition of Melies in the 1920s led to his being awarded the Legion of Honor in 1931., Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume One, 1890-1945". Pages 747-765. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1987., Was cinema's first real fantasist. Considered the absolute greatest fictional fantatsist of his time., Had all of his early equipment (projectors, printers and processing equipment) custom made from designs of others (namely the Lumiere's) that he had improved on., His brother 'Gaston Méliès' (qv) opened a sales office in New York City in 1903 to market his films in the US. They published a catalog with very detailed and extensive descriptions in English. Georges would then shoot two negatives of each of his films--one of which would be sent to the States., Father of 'André Méliès' (qv) ., Before getting into motion pictures, his jobs, which he reportedly loved, included work as a conjurer, illusionist and theater owner/manager. It was this background that fueled his imagination in regards to making motion pictures. Unlike the Lumiere Brothers, especially director Louis Lumiere, he didn't think that the cinema was simply for recording, films actualities and taking snapshots of reality. Instead, he considered the medium a perfect vehicle to further escape for an audience.
Biographical Movies: _Le grand Méliès (1952)_ (qv)
Death Notes: Paris, France
Georges Melies, a office conjuror near grounding, consummate ancient saw the topical "moving pictures" contained by 1895. Little complete a year subsequent, Melies be film and projecting his momentous creation. By misery, he discovered that he could development stop-motion photography to render swindle optical effects. Melies was also the first to use technique such by the use of the fade-in, the fade-out, and the dissolve to compile the first genuine narrative films. Melies made over 500 films, but his most legendary - _Le voyage dans la lune (1902)_ (qv) (Voyage to the Moon). Still, Melies, broken in in classic eighteenth century theater, conceive all of his films in language of fully played-out scene. Unable to hang over to conscious with the varying industry, the anticlimax of his occurrence was fashioned with impecuniousness, on the other hand his films would be monumental stepping stones in favour of extreme auteurs such as 'D.W. Griffith' (qv).
Birth Notes: Paris, France
Books: Paul Hammond. _Marvelous Méliès._ London: Gordon Fraser, 1974. ISBN 0900406380, Georges Méliès, Maurice Bessy, Loc Duca. _Mes memoires par Georges Méliès._ Paris: prisma, 1945., Frank Thompson. _The Star Film Ranch: Texas' First Picture Show._ Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press, 1996. ISBN 1556224818, Madeleine Malthête-Méliès. _Méliès l'enchanteur._ Paris: Hachette, 1973., Elizabeth Ezra. _Georges Méliès: The Birth of the Auteur._ New York: Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., 2000. ISBN 0719053951, Georges Méliès. _Mes Memoires._ 1938., 'Stan Brakhage' (qv). _The Brakhage Lectures: Georges Melies, David Wark Griffith, Carl Theodore Dreyer, Sergei Eisenstein._ Chicago, IL: GoodLion, 1972., John Frazer. _Artificially Arranged Scenes: The Films of Georges Méliès._ Boston: G.K. Hall, 1979. ISBN 0816183686
Birth Name: Méliès, Marie-Georges-Jean
Spouse: 'Jeanne d'Alcy' (qv) (1926 - 21 January 1938) (his death), 'Marie-Georges Méliès' (qv) (? - ?)
Death Date: 21 January 1938
Portrayed: _"From the Earth to the Moon" (1998)_ (qv), _Le grand Méliès (1952)_ (qv)
Birth Date: 8 December 1861
Articles: "Variety" (USA), 26 January 1938, "Stop Camera Pioneer Discoverer, Melies, Dies Broke in Paris", "New York Times" (USA), 23 January 1938, pg. 9:2, "Georges Melies; French Motion Picture Producer a Pioneer in Industry", "Variety" (USA), 16 October 1909, pg. 13:1, "Melies' Suit [against the Motion Picture Patents Co.] Near Trial", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 2 October 1909, pg. 444, "George Méliès's Scenario Contest", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 25 September 1909, pg. 409, "Georges Méliès's Scenario Contest", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 21 August 1909, pg. 250, "The Méliès Competitions", "Motion Picture World" (USA), 25 May 1907, pg. 188, "Burglars Break in and Steal"
'D.W. Griffith' (qv) said about Melies, "I owe him everything.", 'Charles Chaplin' (qv) said he was "the alchemist of light.", His grave is situated in the Père Lachaise cemetery (Paris, France), He built the first movie studio in Europe., Is regarded as "The Father of Special Effects.", He was the first to use production sketches and storyboards., On December 28, 1895, he was a member of the first audience in the world to see the Lumiere brothers' Cinematographe., He tried to buy Cinematographe equipment from the Lumieres but they refused to sell to him. He got into the film business by buying a projector from R. W. Paul and buying a Bioscope camera., His first films, like those of the Lumieres, were simple life scenes which he added to the program at his theatre, the Theatre Robert-Houdin. He later filmed scenes of himself doing magic tricks., Melies worked with two engineers at his theatre workshop to build a camera of his own. The first prototype weighed over 75 pounds., While shooting one of his life scenes in the Place de l'Opera in Paris, the camera jammed. It took about a minute to clear the problem and resume shooting. When the film was processed and screened, Melies saw a bus suddenly turn into a hearse; people in the scene suddenly appeared or disappeared. This accident led to his discovery of stop motion trickery which became his first filmic special effects technique. This stop motion technique had previously been discovered and used by Edison, but Melies made extensive use of it in his short films., He considered the United States such an important market that his company had an office there. Many of his production sketches and storyboards were captioned in English as well as French., By the time he left film production, he had created over 500 films., When he discontinued film production, Melies himself reportedly destroyed the original elements of most of his films., The Theatre Robert-Houdin was closed in 1914 as a result of World War I. This sent him into bankruptcy., The French surrealist movement of the 1920s brought about a rediscovery of his surviving works., The recognition by the French surrealist movement led to acknowledgement of his contributions to the art and industry of the motion picture. A search was conducted for him and he was discovered operating a Kiosk at the Gare Montparnasse where he was selling candy and toys., The rediscovery and recognition of Melies in the 1920s led to his being awarded the Legion of Honor in 1931., Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume One, 1890-1945". Pages 747-765. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1987., Was cinema's first real fantasist. Considered the absolute greatest fictional fantatsist of his time., Had all of his early equipment (projectors, printers and processing equipment) custom made from designs of others (namely the Lumiere's) that he had improved on., His brother 'Gaston Méliès' (qv) opened a sales office in New York City in 1903 to market his films in the US. They published a catalog with very detailed and extensive descriptions in English. Georges would then shoot two negatives of each of his films--one of which would be sent to the States., Father of 'André Méliès' (qv) ., Before getting into motion pictures, his jobs, which he reportedly loved, included work as a conjurer, illusionist and theater owner/manager. It was this background that fueled his imagination in regards to making motion pictures. Unlike the Lumiere Brothers, especially director Louis Lumiere, he didn't think that the cinema was simply for recording, films actualities and taking snapshots of reality. Instead, he considered the medium a perfect vehicle to further escape for an audience.
Biographical Movies: _Le grand Méliès (1952)_ (qv)
Death Notes: Paris, France
Georges Melies, a administrative instrumentalist near research, early saw the unmarked "moving pictures" encircled by 1895. Little done a year subsequent, Melies be film and projecting his personal creation. By quirk, he discovered that he could consume stop-motion photography to render practical joke ocular effects. Melies was also the first to use technique such by process of the fade-in, the fade-out, and the dissolve to revolve out the first actual narrative films. Melies made over 500 films, but his unmatched familiar - _Le voyage dans la lune (1902)_ (qv) (Voyage to the Moon). Still, Melies, accustomed in classic eighteenth century theater, conceive all of his films in language of fully played-out scene. Unable to aver far-reaching awake with the varying industry, the closing stage of his duration was bent with neediness, but his films would be monumental stepping stones all for acute auteurs such as 'D.W. Griffith' (qv).
Birth Notes: Paris, France
Books: Paul Hammond. _Marvelous Méliès._ London: Gordon Fraser, 1974. ISBN 0900406380, Georges Méliès, Maurice Bessy, Loc Duca. _Mes memoires par Georges Méliès._ Paris: prisma, 1945., Frank Thompson. _The Star Film Ranch: Texas' First Picture Show._ Plano, TX: Republic of Texas Press, 1996. ISBN 1556224818, Madeleine Malthête-Méliès. _Méliès l'enchanteur._ Paris: Hachette, 1973., Elizabeth Ezra. _Georges Méliès: The Birth of the Auteur._ New York: Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., 2000. ISBN 0719053951, Georges Méliès. _Mes Memoires._ 1938., 'Stan Brakhage' (qv). _The Brakhage Lectures: Georges Melies, David Wark Griffith, Carl Theodore Dreyer, Sergei Eisenstein._ Chicago, IL: GoodLion, 1972., John Frazer. _Artificially Arranged Scenes: The Films of Georges Méliès._ Boston: G.K. Hall, 1979. ISBN 0816183686
Birth Name: Méliès, Marie-Georges-Jean
Spouse: 'Jeanne d'Alcy' (qv) (1926 - 21 January 1938) (his death), 'Marie-Georges Méliès' (qv) (? - ?)
Death Date: 21 January 1938
Portrayed: _"From the Earth to the Moon" (1998)_ (qv), _Le grand Méliès (1952)_ (qv)
Birth Date: 8 December 1861
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