Thu
27/08
Teatro Comunale di Bologna > 16:00
16mm & Recovered: Plaat & Méliès
Hervé Pichard (Cinémathèque française)
Drum accompaniment by Frank Bockius
La Fée carabosse will be presented with a live comment by Andrea Meneghelli, written by Jacques Malthête and based on an original text by Georges Méliès (Italian with englis subtitles)
HENRI PLAAT: FILMMAKING AS ‘AN EXPLODED HOBBY’
Henri Plaat (1936) is a visual artist and creator of graphic work, drawings, gouaches and collages. After his premature departure from school he enrolled in the University of Applied Arts to study typography. Feeling limited by the course, he soon began to draw and took an interest in the hieroglyphs of ancient Egypt and Mayan culture. His personal memories of World War II and newsreels influenced his work to develop a unique code to rebel against reality: “Humour is an antidote to the fear of terrible things”. He picked up a camera in 1966 and started to make films first on 8mm and later on 16mm. Plaat’s interest lies in the interplay between the imaginary and the real, as shown by his use of light and colour, movement and stillness as well as sound and music. In his shorter filmic performances, he adapts photo montages with opera and song, juxtaposing Wagner and Zarah Leander with war sounds and aircraft noise. Using the tactics of the absurd, Plaat playfully examines the theatrical and the quality of wonder often through associative improvisation, contrasted by the crude reality of the haunting wars that ravaged Europe. His eclectic travelogues are fantastical elegies venturing into dream-like archaeological expeditions – to Latin America, India, Greece and North America – with a focus on derelict landscapes and dilapidated beauty. His gaze on fallen empires and the melancholy of ancient greatness is both nostalgic and embodies the urge for truthfulness, to learn from the origins and to conserve this sentiment for future humanity. Plaat’s decision to work on film was strongly motivated by the visual qualities of Kodachrome and Tri-X reversal stocks, which were able to translate his preference for light, shadow and colour.
Marius Hrdy
MÉLIÈS 1900
The year 1900 marked a turning point in the work of Georges Méliès. Over the winter of 1899-1900 he began enlarging and improving his first studio, which had been built in 1897. By the end of 1899 he had already made over 200 films, ranging from 20 to 120 metres long, in which he developed and combined impressive special effects (the stop-motion tricks for appearances, disappearances and substitutions, fades in and out, slow focus in transitions, dissolves, simple and multiple exposures) and he took up a variety of genres that he called Natural Views (documentaries), Composed Subjects or Scenic Genres (comic skits, stage plays, ballets, reconstituted newsreels), and Fantastic Films (transformation views, trick films). One of his first productions of 1900 (a record year, with almost 80 films), was a series of 17 20m films shot at the Paris Exposition. That same year Méliès shot 20 advertising films for various products (a brand of aperitif, feeding bottles, whiskey, shoe polish, mustard, etc.). It was also the year in which he made Jeanne d’Arc, his first film longer than 200 m, and the year in which, thanks to multiple exposures, he managed to play six musicians conducted by himself in L’Homme-orchestre, a tour-de-force that he repeated three years later in Le Mélomane, throwing his head six times on a musical stave. Also, that year he experimented with accelerating speed in Spiritisme abracadabrant, Le Déshabillage impossible and Le Réveil d’un monsieur pressé, and he employed a horizontally divided stage in Le Savant et le Chimpanzé and La Maison tranquille. Lastly, in 1900 he directed Rêve de Noël, a filmed féerie of 160 m in 20 tableaux. For this film, the Méliès catalogue offers an additional, optional tableau (Le grand orgue et la maîtrise) between the numbers 11 and 12. The same year, Nouvelles luttes extravagantes was available (for sale) without the previous version Luttes extravagantes from 1899, with which the film was usually put together. We can see from these two examples and from others found in the catalogue that early silent cinema was far from immobile.
Jacques Malthête
ProjectionInfo
Subtitle
Original version with subtitles
Admittance
OTHER THOUGHTS III
I AM AN OLD SMOKING, MOVING INDIAN MOVIE-STAR
Les Miracles du brahmine
LE FÉE CARABOSSE OU LE POIGNARD FATAL. Grande légende fantastique bretonne en 20 tableaux
French intertitles
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