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IMDbPro

Sur un air de Charleston

  • 1927
  • 17min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,9/10
751
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Catherine Hessling in Sur un air de Charleston (1927)
BreveFantascienza

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaShot in three days, this surreal, silent short shows a native white girl teaching a futuristic African airman the Charleston dance.Shot in three days, this surreal, silent short shows a native white girl teaching a futuristic African airman the Charleston dance.Shot in three days, this surreal, silent short shows a native white girl teaching a futuristic African airman the Charleston dance.

  • Regia
    • Jean Renoir
  • Sceneggiatura
    • André Cerf
    • Pierre Lestringuez
  • Star
    • Catherine Hessling
    • Johnny Hudgins
    • Pierre Braunberger
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,9/10
    751
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jean Renoir
    • Sceneggiatura
      • André Cerf
      • Pierre Lestringuez
    • Star
      • Catherine Hessling
      • Johnny Hudgins
      • Pierre Braunberger
    • 16Recensioni degli utenti
    • 6Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto4

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    Interpreti principali6

    Modifica
    Catherine Hessling
    Catherine Hessling
    • Parisian Savage
    Johnny Hudgins
    • African Explorer
    Pierre Braunberger
    • Angel
    André Cerf
    • Angel
    Pierre Lestringuez
    • Angel
    Jean Renoir
    Jean Renoir
    • Angel
    • Regia
      • Jean Renoir
    • Sceneggiatura
      • André Cerf
      • Pierre Lestringuez
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti16

    5,9751
    1
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    5
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    7
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    9
    10

    Recensioni in evidenza

    9plaidpotato

    Just for Fun

    Shot in three days on a practically zero budget, using film stock left over from Nana, Jean Renoir made this strange curio just for fun. He never edited it. It was never released. He later gave the footage to the Cinémathèque Française, who pieced the film together.

    The story: it's the year 2028. An explorer from Central Africa (Johnny Huggins, a jazz dancer of the 1920s, who appears here in minstrel makeup; he actually was black) arrives in a post-apocalyptic Paris in a flying sphere. He encounters a scantily-clad wild girl and her monkey friend. The girl dances the Charleston to try to seduce him. He thinks she's threatening him and he runs away. She chases after him, dancing ever more aggressively and seductively. The explorer begins to watch, hesitantly, but curiously. The girl draws a telephone on the wall, which turns into a real telephone, and she calls some kind of disembodied human head with wings. Some other winged disembodied heads appear. The girl hands the phone to the explorer, and one of the heads speaks to him--apparently letting him know that the girl's OK. Then the explorer and the girl dance the Charleston together. The girl leaves with the explorer in his flying sphere, her tearful monkey friend waving goodbye.
    7Spondonman

    Gotta dance

    As a closet completist I felt I must see this one, even though what I knew about it wasn't prepossessing. And the result: a piece of exuberant tosh by Renoir - the classics were definitely a long way off.

    In 2028 black-faced Negro flies in to Terra Incognito - post War France - in a sphere and is ensnared by an indefatigable dancing scantily clad white aborigine woman. Although he too has a sense of rhythm he's especially impressed by her either dancing first in slow- and then fast-mo. Slinky and shameless dance moves, a telephone drawn on the wall and 5 bodiless grinning angels are highlights - give me Tex Avery anyday! Hessling was certainly good to look at (personally speaking of course) but even though it's so short it still drags without a coherent plot.

    But! This wasn't meant to be heavy, and as knockabout sci-fi it was an interesting 19 minutes - I might even watch it again sometime.
    4ackstasis

    "That is how White aborigines culture became fashionable in Africa"

    I enjoy science-fiction just as much as the next man… but what the hell was that? Apparently shot over just three days using excess film stock left over from his previous film, 'Nana (1926),' this Jean Renoir short is a bewildering futuristic satire, produced on a budget that couldn't have been much more than zero. In the year 2028, following a great war, Africa has become the most civilised region on Earth, and what was formerly Europe has been designated "Terres Inconnues (Unknown Land)." An African explorer – played by Johnny Huggins, a Black man dressed up as a White man dressed up as a Black man, if you follow me – travels to the ruins of Paris in his spherical aircraft, and lands outside the lair of a Parisian savage (Catherine Hessling, then the director's wife) and her primate companion, perhaps the creepiest ape-man costume I've ever seen. The savage, as part of some bizarre sexual initiation ritual, starts showing the explorer the Charleston dance, which he is delighted to learn himself.

    It doesn't help the film that Hessling, who was wonderful the following year in Renoir's 'The Little Match Girl (1928),' isn't much of a dancer, though the extensive use of slow-motion adds a touch of surrealism to the ceremony. Furthermore, I'm quite shocked that Renoir would exploit his own wife as such a blatant sexual object – it doesn't come as a surprise to learn of their divorce just three years later! On the plus side, I did like the general sci-fi concept behind the film, and the slyly satiric touch of the reversing the racial roles usually typical in such stories as this. However, why Renoir decided to dress up his Black actor as a minstrel will remain a mystery for all of time. Silly, crude and quite pointless, 'Charleston Parade (1927)' is a cinematic oddity from one of cinema's most respected directors, and is perhaps an effort that he would have liked to forget. The DVD version came without a musical soundtrack, but I compromised with a selection of pieces from Dmitri Shostakovich.
    6Bunuel1976

    CHARLESTON PARADE (Jean Renoir, 1927) **1/2

    This is, by far, Jean Renoir's oddest film: a surreal, sci-fi/musical short which was originally accompanied by a specially-composed score but whose print on the DVD itself, bafflingly, features no underscoring whatsoever. Incongruously enough, the film apparently grew out of Renoir's desire to utilize footage left over from NANA (1926)!

    Again, we find Renoir's wife at the time – Catherine Hessling – in a major role; here, she is a sexy dancer from the future who teaches a sophisticated negro explorer(!) the Charleston dance (at which he eventually proves himself remarkably adept). It is very hard to believe now that Hessling's dancing caused quite a stir at the time but there you go. Unfortunately, the film doesn't add up to much and there's practically nothing of the traditional Renoir on display. Besides, its premise isn't enough to sustain even the film's two-reel length, with the protracted dance sequence itself, filmed at a variety of speeds, emerging as a hollow exercise in style.

    For what it's worth, other characters appearing in the film include a (fake-looking) monkey who is Hessling's sole companion on the seemingly deserted place the coloured astronaut lands on and, for no apparent reason, a group of grinning angels (among them Renoir himself)! The film's best gag is one that would soon become a staple of animation: at one point, Hessling draws a telephone on a wall and this immediately materializes into the real thing.
    6FerdinandVonGalitzien

    A Private Divertimento

    "Sur Un Air De Charleston" is a good example of the evil influences that came from beyond the Atlantic sea… strange customs, garments, gastronomy or dances; modernises that almost put an end the conservatives European habits.

    A reputable French director (a frenchified dichotomy… ) instead of listening day and night to "La Marseilleise", changed such martial and delicate music rhythm to Jazz, that out-of-tune Amerikan music that was fashionable during the mad 20's in Europe (with the exception of the aristocratic circles that preferred dancing in circles in to dizzy waltzes). So, due to Renoir's liking of Jazz and with some left over stock footage of his excellent and previous film "Nana" (1926), he decided to have a good time making this surreal, bizarre but funny musical silent film (a frenchified incongruity).

    In 2028, a mysterious African explorer puts his aircraft on Terra incognita. He meets a charming young native that is accompanied by a chimpanzee, who is going to introduce him to a dance of the wild natives (not the chimpanzee)…, that is to say, the Charleston.

    That's the bizarre story of the film, a perfect excuse to put and show the French (Dame Catherine Hessling, natürlich! ) dancing the Charleston wildly… forward, backward in fast and stop motion. Meanwhile the astonished African explorer (Herr Johnny Huggings, a black actor characterized as a negro!) learns to dance quickly and hastily.

    Obviously "Sur Un Air De Charleston" is a harmless, a private divertimento, a bizarre but charming short film made to show Renoir's wife's dancing talent. It is an oeuvre that includes the atmosphere that Herr Renoir was so fond of in some of his early films besides … all that Jazz.

    And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must dance St. Vitus's dance.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Jean Renoir's debut as an actor.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Jean Renoir: Part One - From La Belle Époque to World War II (1993)

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 19 marzo 1927 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Francia
    • Lingua
      • Nessuna
    • Celebre anche come
      • Charleston Parade
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Studios d'Epinay, 10 rue du Mont, Epinay-sur-Seine, Seine-Saint-Denis, Francia(Studio)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Néo-Film
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      17 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Silent
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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