Pauvre Pierrot
Pauvre Pierrot | |
---|---|
Directed by | Charles-Émile Reynaud |
Written by | Baden Ghanayem |
Music by | Gaston Paulin |
Release date |
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Running time | Originally 15 minutes approx; after restoration 4 minutes approx |
Country | France |
Language | Silent |
Pauvre Pierrot (or Poor Pete) is a French short animated film directed by Charles-Émile Reynaud in 1891 and released in 1892. It consists of 500 individually painted images and lasts about 15 minutes originally.[1]
It is one of the first animated films ever made, and alongside Un bon bock (directed in 1888 of which only few images survive at the Cinémathèque française) and Le Clown et ses chiens was exhibited on 28 October 1892 when Charles-Émile Reynaud opened his Théâtre Optique at the Musée Grévin. It was the first film to demonstrate the Théâtre Optique system developed by Reynaud in 1888. Pauvre Pierrot is also believed to be the first known usage of film perforations. The combined performance of all three films was known as Pantomimes Lumineuses.
These were the first animated pictures publicly exhibited by means of picture bands. Reynaud gave the entire presentation himself by manipulating the images.[1]
Synopsis
[edit]One night, Harlequin encounters his beloved Columbina in a courtyard. Soon, however, Pierrot knocks on the door and they hide. Pierrot starts performing a serenade for Columbina, but Harlequin constantly interrupts. He pokes Pierrot with a stick and steals his bottle, always keeping just out of sight. Eventually Pierrot gets scared of the unseen prankster and leaves, allowing Harlequin to enter Columbina's house as the short ends.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Charles-Émile Reynaud". Who's Who of Victorian Cinema. Retrieved 2007-03-11.
External links
[edit]- Pauvre Pierrot (1892) on YouTube with 1993 score.
- Pauvre Pierrot at IMDb
- 1892 films
- 1892 short films
- French animated short films
- French silent short films
- Films directed by Émile Reynaud
- 1890s animated short films
- Films about clowns
- Silent films in color
- Animated films without speech
- 1890s French films
- Harlequin
- Short animated film stubs
- 1890s French film stubs
- Silent films with original scores