PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,9/10
2,4 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un diablillo se aparece en la habitación de una posada.Un diablillo se aparece en la habitación de una posada.Un diablillo se aparece en la habitación de una posada.
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Reseñas destacadas
This amusing Méliès feature has several of the kind of visual effects that made him famous, and most of them work quite well. The story starts when "The Black Imp" plays a series of practical jokes on an unwary traveler, and it then follows the battle of wits that ensues. The action that follows uses quite a few props, most of them simple everyday objects used in humorous and sometimes creative ways. Most of the camera tricks are done with skill, and the movie thus gets plenty of mileage out of some simple material. Most of it is fun to watch, and it's a good display of skill with the camera. It's definitely worth seeing if you have any interest in these earliest movies.
Director Georges Méliès was the greatest film maker of his day. Unlike the films of Lumiere and Edison, his films told complex stories and had a lot of very, very funny and amazing stunts--probably due to his earlier career as a magician.
In this short film, a devil is shown bounding about an apartment--appearing and disappearing at will. Soon, a man enters and is soon tortured by the imp. First, furniture appears and disappears--chasing the man around his apartment. Then, when the devil appears, the man chases him and tries to hit him, but he keeps appearing and disappearing and it soon becomes obvious there is nothing he can do to stop him! This film is one stop-motion camera trick after another and is super high-paced and funny. Despite its age, it's well worth seeing.
If you want to see this film online, go to Google and type in "Méliès" and then click the video button for a long list of his films that are viewable without special software.
In this short film, a devil is shown bounding about an apartment--appearing and disappearing at will. Soon, a man enters and is soon tortured by the imp. First, furniture appears and disappears--chasing the man around his apartment. Then, when the devil appears, the man chases him and tries to hit him, but he keeps appearing and disappearing and it soon becomes obvious there is nothing he can do to stop him! This film is one stop-motion camera trick after another and is super high-paced and funny. Despite its age, it's well worth seeing.
If you want to see this film online, go to Google and type in "Méliès" and then click the video button for a long list of his films that are viewable without special software.
The black imp in the title is almost Satanic. He inhabits a room that is rented out to people. He is a menace. A poor guy gets the room and tries to put his coat in a dresser, but the dresser keeps moving around. At one point it goes up and up and then disappears. The best sequence in the film is one where the guy first causes several chairs to appear and then tries to get rid of them. Every time he throws one aside, another one takes its place. The whole thing ends disastrously for the guy. The special effects are really wonderful.
The jump cut was the key element in early movie conjurer Georges Melies bag of tricks, and as he grew more experienced in the production of films so his use of this trick grew more sophisticated. This ingenious little movie shows off Melies' adeptness to good effect, and it's clear that a lot of imagination has been used in a simple tale.
A mischievous devil appears in a hotel room and is just preparing for a snooze when a traveller enters the room. Angered by this intrusion the devil plays a series of tricks on the traveller (who is played by Melies) until he drives him to near madness so that he has to be escorted from the room by hotel staff.
The use of the jump cut is used to good effect here, and they are particularly effective thanks to their unusual seamlessness. Usually in these early films it's easy to see where the cut has taken place. In this film, even though our knowledge of the technique means we know the exact moment when it has been used, very often here we can't actually see the cut. Definitely one of Melies' better films.
A mischievous devil appears in a hotel room and is just preparing for a snooze when a traveller enters the room. Angered by this intrusion the devil plays a series of tricks on the traveller (who is played by Melies) until he drives him to near madness so that he has to be escorted from the room by hotel staff.
The use of the jump cut is used to good effect here, and they are particularly effective thanks to their unusual seamlessness. Usually in these early films it's easy to see where the cut has taken place. In this film, even though our knowledge of the technique means we know the exact moment when it has been used, very often here we can't actually see the cut. Definitely one of Melies' better films.
A man rents a room at an inn only to find that a mischievous imp wants the room for himself
This is a film by early film maker Georges Melies the man who single handedly effectively invented cinema special effects . Watching this short film that has a running time of less than four minutes it helps if you realise beforehand that despite having a title like THE BLACK IMP you're not going to be watching any type of horror film but instead is a slapstick comedy
The selling point of course are the effects achieved by jump cut replacement photography which fellow commentator and the much missed F Gwynplain MacIntyre explains was still being used in film and television in the 1960s and 70s
That said you have to be slightly forgiving when watching this short . Once you know how the special effects are done the film loses some of its magic . Also the whimsy and unrepentant slapstick sense of humour is rather overdone in the eyes of a perhaps more sophisticated audience so you have to watch it with a 1905 mentality in order to get the full benefit
This is a film by early film maker Georges Melies the man who single handedly effectively invented cinema special effects . Watching this short film that has a running time of less than four minutes it helps if you realise beforehand that despite having a title like THE BLACK IMP you're not going to be watching any type of horror film but instead is a slapstick comedy
The selling point of course are the effects achieved by jump cut replacement photography which fellow commentator and the much missed F Gwynplain MacIntyre explains was still being used in film and television in the 1960s and 70s
That said you have to be slightly forgiving when watching this short . Once you know how the special effects are done the film loses some of its magic . Also the whimsy and unrepentant slapstick sense of humour is rather overdone in the eyes of a perhaps more sophisticated audience so you have to watch it with a 1905 mentality in order to get the full benefit
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- CuriosidadesStar Film 683 - 685.
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Detalles
- Duración
- 4min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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