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The Méliès Mystery 2021 123movies

The Méliès Mystery 2021 123movies

Jan. 02, 202160 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Le Mystère Méliès 2021 123movies, Full Movie Online – Son of a shoe manufacturer, Georges Méliès decided to devote himself to magic. In 1888, he used his share of the inheritance to buy the Robert-Houdin Theater, Boulevard des Italiens, where his fairy-tale shows drew crowds. Seven years later, dazzled by the animated image of the Lumière brothers, he launches into a new art form, cinema. His thirst for enchantment led him to invent special effects. But the evolution of the public’s taste and the passage of the cinema to the industrial era put away his dream machine. Forgotten, he ends up running a toy store in the Montparnasse train station. In 1923, in a fit of despair, he destroyed the negatives of his films. Since then, film buffs all over the world have found and restored reels..
Plot: A documentary that details the process of restoring 270 of the 520 lost films of pioneering director Georges Méliès, all orchestrated by a Franco-American collaboration between Lobster Films, the National Film Center, and the Library of Congress.
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Ratings:

7.5/10 Votes: 306
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N/A Votes: 11 Popularity: 1.585 | TMDB

Reviews:

Who Méliès was and what happened to his negatives.
“The Mystery of Méliès” is an hour long documentary which is essentially in two parts. The first half is about the film career of Georges Méliès. The second half is about what happened to his over 500 movies…most of which today are lost. According to the film, about 200 of his movies remain, at least in part (I have seen and reviewed 160 of them). So where did the prints and negatives go? Well, the film tells you and the journey of the existing negatives and their preservation is fascinating and VERY important to film historians and buffs.

I loved this documentary and strongly recommend it. It is being a bit nit-picky but the film does miss one thing…how other film makers literally took a Méliès story and refilmed it themselves, nearly scene-for-scene, and passing it off as their own! Segundo de Chomón, in particular, was notorious for doing this…and talk about his and Edison’s and others’ knockoff versions was oddly missing from the documentary. A minor, minor detail….and no reason not to see the picture.

Review By: planktonrules
The No-Longer-So-Mysterious Portrait of Méliès
“Le Mystère Méliès” is yet another movie about Georges Méliès. After most of his, as this documentary points out, 200-some surviving films (of the original 520-some that he made, which is actually a rather good record for the silent era–especially for a guy who burned his negatives of them) have been available for a few years now on home video from Flicker Alley (and thereafter ripped (off) to YouTube) and after Martin Scorsese made that popular movie, “Hugo” (2011), that’s partly about him, I don’t think there’s as much mystery left to Méliès–at least not relative to other important figures in early cinema. There’s more to the timeline than Edison and Lumière, then Méliès, then Griffith, with maybe a nod nowadays to the first female filmmaker Guy or the interesting beard of Muybridge, after all. I’d still like to see, for instance, a Brighton School box set of the surviving work of G. A. Smith, James Williamson, Esmé Collings, Charles Urban, with even the series work of William Friese-Greene thrown in some day. Or, heck, how about a huge Pathé collection (and one with preferably an English subtitles option, you Francophile home-video distributors… but I digress).

Anyways, the 1997 “The Magic of Méliès” (La magie Méliès) does more justice to enthusiastically covering the cine-magician’s life and films. “The Méliès Mystery” does do a better job discussing the rediscovery and preservation of the films, which isn’t surprising given that it’s made by the preservationists at Lobster Films–Eric Lange, Serge Bromberg and company. And the same was true of the last Méliès restoration documentary they did, “The Extraordinary Voyage” (2011). Their approach to Méliès himself, however, is popular rather than scholarly.

Evidence of this is that it repeats a couple apocryphal tales, albeit ones told by the cine-magician himself. One narrativizes the novelty of cinema by him witnessing the audience’s fear of an approaching train on screen at the public introduction of the Lumière Cinématographe in the basement of a Parisian café on 28 December 1895, which is partly demonstrably false given that there was no such Lumière film of a train until the following month and that the famous approaching one we know to this day may not have been made until 1897 (see Martin Loiperdinger’s essay ” Lumière’s ‘Arrival of the Train’: Cinema’s Founding Myth” for more on that).

The second case is the self-promoted myth that Méliès discovered the stop-substitution effect by an accident of a camera jam as he recorded an ordinary actuality film of a street scene. Fact is many actualities from that era contain jump cuts–where the filmmakers stopped recording and, then, restarted from the same position as the action of a scene picked up again. None I’ve seen are as enthrallingly full of magical transformations as Méliès would have us believe. If the stop-substitution, touched up by editing, which is how they actually did it back then, weren’t already obvious to a magician like Méliès and a connoisseur of screen entertainment such as the magic lantern that had existed for centuries with transformation effects and, more recently, photographic ones, he might’ve seen that the trick had already been done in the Edison Kinetoscope films, such as “The Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots” (1895), where it’s employed to substitute a dummy for the decapitation spectacle.

Uh-huh, and Louis Lumière invented cinema from a dream about the mechanics of a sewing machine and not as based on the prior work on film cameras and, sometimes, projectors from the likes of Marey, Anschütz, Dickson, Edison, Jenkins, Armat, Reynaud, Demenÿ, etc. Indeed, the story told in this documentary regarding the impetus for the brothers Lumière inventing the Cinématographe is but one of several the family told over the years. A eureka moment of Archimedes jumping from his bathtub to run naked through the streets, or a falling apple knocking the idea of gravity into Newton’s noggin is more entertaining than the reality of invention based on hard work and the long history of making slight variations to other people’s work.

Another quibble I had was that the documentarians pretend a mystery over the parallax of the doubled prints Méliès made of his films–speculating it had something to do with stereoscopy (which actually did have a long history in motion pictures before Méliès and long before “Avatar” (2009), but that’s another story)–before they explain that it was so that he’d have a European and an American print for duplication. Indeed, thereafter, this practice would become common in Hollywood and elsewhere. A more amusing story is made of Pathé’s dedication to making pastiches of Méliès films, although they were the best in the business at imitating others’ work in general; it’s why they were the biggest movie studio in the world before the counterattack of Edison’s Trust for control of the American market, WWI and such got in the way. American piracy of Star films are also covered, as is the tale of the American negatives of Méliès’s films from his brother’s laboratory, to basement, to Leon Schlesinger’s private collection, to the Academy and Library of Congress and back to France. There are plenty of clips, the usual talking heads and a narrator, as well.

But, listen to me, so spoiled, with fading memories of being sustained by a few Méliès trick films and féeries being released on VHS by Kino or from black-and-white reduction prints by smaller distributors, now nitpicking the growing abundance of riches that have come our way, from DVD and Blu-ray and since to streaming. This documentary paired with a few of the more colorful prints of his pictures not only appearing on TCM, but also to a potentially wider audience at HBO Max, and in the same first few months of the year where I could also listen in on a Zoom presentation of early Méliès films that were distributed as flip books. Point is, I make a lot of criticisms, but I am thankful. Keep up the good work, film preservationists.

Review By: Cineanalyst

Other Information:

Original Title Le Mystère Méliès
Release Date 2021-01-02
Release Year 2021

Original Language fr
Runtime N/A
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated N/A
Genre Documentary, Biography
Director Eric Lange
Writer Serge Bromberg, Eric Lange
Actors Serge Bromberg, Costa-Gavras, Béatrice de Pastre
Country France
Awards N/A
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

Original title Le Mystère Méliès
TMDb Rating 6.773 11 votes

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