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L'arrivo di un treno alla stazione di La Ciotat

Titolo originale: L'arrivée d'un train à La Ciotat
  • 1896
  • Not Rated
  • 1min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,4/10
13.662
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
L'arrivo di un treno alla stazione di La Ciotat (1896)
BreveUn documentario

Uno sguardo attraverso la storia di quando un treno arriva alla stazione di La Ciotat.Uno sguardo attraverso la storia di quando un treno arriva alla stazione di La Ciotat.Uno sguardo attraverso la storia di quando un treno arriva alla stazione di La Ciotat.

  • Regia
    • Auguste Lumière
    • Louis Lumière
  • Star
    • Madeleine Koehler
    • Marcel Koehler
    • Mrs. Auguste Lumiere
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,4/10
    13.662
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Auguste Lumière
      • Louis Lumière
    • Star
      • Madeleine Koehler
      • Marcel Koehler
      • Mrs. Auguste Lumiere
    • 67Recensioni degli utenti
    • 16Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto12

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    Interpreti principali6

    Modifica
    Madeleine Koehler
    • Self
    Marcel Koehler
    • Self
    Mrs. Auguste Lumiere
    Mrs. Auguste Lumiere
    • Self
    Jeanne-Joséphine Lumière
    • Self
    Rose Lumière
    Rose Lumière
    • Self
    Suzanne Lumière
    • Self
    • Regia
      • Auguste Lumière
      • Louis Lumière
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti67

    7,413.6K
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    10

    Recensioni in evidenza

    7Red-Barracuda

    The beginning of a great adventure

    A train arrives at a station. And changes everything.

    There isn't a lot to really say about L'arrivée d'un train a La Ciotat as a film itself. It's under a minute and shows a train pull up at a busy station. But what it signifies is another thing altogether. When we see that train come closer and closer until it stops in the station, on a surface level we watch a train arrive but it actuality what we are really witnessing is cinema arrive. This short film may not be the earliest movie but it is the first iconic image of the moving picture age.

    Auguste and Louis Lumière weren't really artists. Their early films don't stand up to the highly imaginative work of George Méliès for example. But they still remain enormously important cinema giants. Not for the content of their films but for the fact that they kicked things off in the first place and produced the first iconic moment in cinema history. And for this reason L'arrivée d'un train a La Ciotat will always be remembered. Everyone who has a love of cinema should really take a minute of their time to pay homage to the first moment in an amazing journey.
    notdempsey

    I Love the 90's...the 1890's!

    Like the notorious inflation adjustment that gives Gone With the Wind (1939) the unbreakable box-office high, a slight technological adjustment given the time (109 years ago!) gives Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat (1895) the best special effects ever (relatively speaking, of course). Forget King Kong (1933), throw out Star Wars (1977), Arrival of a Train' blew audiences away with a little thing called moving pictures. There's a classic rumor of audiences running away from the movie screen, expecting the train to crash right through! As scary as Kong was, nobody expected him to reach into the audience and pick out a few snacks!

    Also, it may not have been all that intentional, but the composition of this static, one-minute shot is excellent, and still unrivaled. The perspective of the train zooming past the lens like a wild stampede, the quick stop, then, the explosion of activity: people coming, going, on the train, off the train. What crisp energy! What a film! Viva la Lumiere!
    TyrconnellPictures

    Genesis

    I have little to add to other reviewers, except to say that this film took a sudden importance in my life last year. In 2002 I was travelling by train to my first ever Cannes Film Festival. At one point the train was moving slowly and I looked out of the window and found that we were pulling through La Ciotat, and the platform hadn't changed a bit. Sadly the train didn't stop, otherwise I would have been tempted to jump off for a moment, but given the purpose of my journey I felt a strange thrill at being there. Just a little personal anecdote, but perhaps it shows something of the power and importance of those early steps in film.
    bob the moo

    Interesting to note change of angle

    I watched this film on a DVD that was rammed with short films from the period. I didn't watch all of them as the main problem with these type of things that their value is more in their historical novelty value rather than entertainment. So to watch them you do need to be put in the correct context so that you can keep this in mind and not watch it with modern eyes. With the Primitives & Pioneers DVD collection though you get nothing to help you out, literally the films are played one after the other (the main menu option is "play all") for several hours. With this it is hard to understand their relevance and as an educational tool it falls down as it leaves the viewer to fend for themselves, which I'm sure is fine for some viewers but certainly not the majority. What it means is that the DVD saves you searching the web for the films individually by putting them all in one place – but that's about it.

    Anyway onto this film which is the continuation of the understandable Lumière standard of standing a camera pointing at an event and then recording it happen. In this case a train pulls into a station and people get out. In terms of action it is not that interesting but in regards history of cinema it does offer something at least. It struck me that the other films from Lumiere I had seen to this point had point head on at the action whereas this one was set so that we had a wider view and that things played out across the screen towards the viewer. Also amusing is that some people become awkward when they notice the camera whereas other just bluster in front of it unaware.

    The usual fare then that produces little of interest in terms of actual content but has more of interest when viewed in its historical and cultural context.
    9jluis1984

    First iconic image of cinema

    On December 28, 1895, at Paris's Salon Indien Du Grand Café, the brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière transformed the industry of entertainment when they did a demonstration of their new invention. The brothers projected a series of images on a screen, but those images were nothing like a normal slide-show, those images were moving as if they were alive. While the idea of motion pictures wasn't new to the audience (Edison's Kinetoscope was a popular entertainment), the devise's ability to project them on a screen was something they had never seen before. 10 short films of barely a minute of duration each were shown that day, and the invention proved to be an enormous success for the brothers, so immediately they decide to keep making movies in order to improve their catalog. One of those new movies would become the first iconic image of the new art.

    "L' Arrivée d'un train à La Ciotat" (literally, "Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat") is without a doubt, one of the most famous films in history, as its image of a train arriving to the station, passing very close to the camera as it slows its speed, quickly became an iconic scene of the new invention. While initially conceived as just another one of the brothers' many "actuality films", it's clear that director Louis Lumière knew exactly where to put his camera in order to get the best image of the event as the film shows he had a good idea of the use of perspective (many consider it a study about long shot, medium shot and close-up). As a side-note, this is the film that originated the classic urban legend about people running away scared from the arriving train, thinking it was a real locomotive what was appearing on the screen.

    While this famous tale has been debunked by historians as a fake story, it's existence is another testament of this movie's importance and continuous influence on the younger generations. Among the many different art-forms that we can find today, cinema is perhaps the one that better reflects the modern society that arose after the industrial revolution of the 19th Century; because, as painting and sculpture did before, it has become a keeper of the most representative icons of our history. "L' Arrivée d'un train à La Ciotat" was not the first movie the brothers screened, and it definitely wasn't the first movie ever made, but despite those details, the image of the arriving train represents the first icon of cinema, and literally, the arrival of a new art form. 9/10

    Altri elementi simili

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    L'innaffiatore annaffiato
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    Sallie Gardner at a Gallop
    7,3
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    Demolizione di un muro
    6,4
    Demolizione di un muro
    La colazione del bimbo
    5,9
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    Roundhay Garden Scene
    7,2
    Roundhay Garden Scene
    The Great Train Robbery
    7,2
    The Great Train Robbery
    La lune à un mètre
    7,4
    La lune à un mètre
    Le manoir du diable
    6,7
    Le manoir du diable
    Viaggio nella luna
    8,1
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    Bataille de neige
    6,7
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    Un Homme de têtes
    7,5
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    Un documentario

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Popular legend has it that, when this film was shown, the audience fled in terror, fearing being run over by the "approaching" train. This legend has since been identified as promotional embellishment, though there is evidence to suggest that people were astounded at the capabilities of the Lumières' cinématographe.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into Louis Lumière (1968)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 25 gennaio 1896 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Francia
    • Lingua
      • Nessuna
    • Celebre anche come
      • L'arrivo di un treno nella stazione di La Ciotat
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • La Ciotat, Bouches-du-Rhône, Francia
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Lumière
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1min
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Silent
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.31 : 1

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