It was, however, on that winter day 115 years ago that the Lumières and their short program invented the idea of the cinema: a room where strangers would all gather together to sit in the dark and pay to watch movies together. It was the ideal culmination to a year in which the art of the motion picture advanced more than it ever would in any subsequent 12-month span.
I would like to take you on a trip back that revolutionary event, when the great art form of the 20th Century, the most important vehicle of entertainment in my lifetime and probably yours, was born. For maximum effect, turn off all the lights and surround yourself with Frenchmen who are absolutely flabbergasted by what they're seeing.

1. La sortie de l'usine Lumière à Lyon (Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory in Lyon)
2. La voltige (Horse Trick Riders)
3. La pêche au poissons rouge (Fishing for Goldfish)
4. Débarquement du congrès des photographes à Lyon (The Photographic Congress Arrives in Lyon)
5. Les forgerons (The Blacksmiths)
6. L'arroseur arrosé (The Sprinkler Sprinkled)*
7. Repas de bébé (Baby's Dinner)
8. Le saut à la couverture (Jumping on the Blanket)
9. La Place des Cordeliers à Lyon (Cordeliers' Square in Lyon)
10. La mer (The Sea)
Apparently even back in that time people thought that watching toddlers do stuff had entertainning value.... Although I admit those segments are better than "Jumping on the blanket", which is mind-boggling (the first misjudged comedy in history?). "Horse trick riders" at least has a horse in it...
ReplyDeleteHehe. Now seriously, this stuff is always fascinating to some degree.
Honestly, there are some of these actualities - none in this set of 10 - that I actually really love. "Train Arriving at the Station" is something I could watch every day; there's something really dramatic about the framing that works even today.
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