IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.3K
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A wall full of advertising posters comes to life.A wall full of advertising posters comes to life.A wall full of advertising posters comes to life.
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In the large body of work produced by the French cinemagician Georges Méliès, the films he is mainly remembered for mainly include his fantasy/science fiction features, as well as his trick films, due to their wonderful charm and great visual effects that were ahead of their time when first premiered. However, this is not to say he was above producing films of other genres; on occasion, he would produce the standard drama/crime film more recognized as being the Edison Manufacturing Company's trademark, and sometimes, especially later in his career, slapstick was particularly prominent in the Star Film Catalog. Unfortunately, most fans of his work have dismissed his films of the latter genre, and for a good reason: Méliès did better with comedy and slapstick when it was in little humorous touches than with actually fully focusing a film on these elements. "The Hilarious Posters" is in many ways more of a comedy than a trick film, with limited effects that serve mainly to bring out the plot - a good thing considering Méliès usually did the opposite, but causing the effects to be shoved to the side and done much more abruptly and clumsily.
In "The Hilarious Posters", the filmmaker makes use of a concept he did numerous themes on throughout his career: the inanimate coming to life, in this case a wall of advertising posters becoming animated. It's an amusing little story, with some good elements of humor and a great finale, but, as other reviewers have already pointed out, the execution of the effects is rather sloppily pulled off. For Méliès, preventing this could easily have been a case of better judgement: to bring the posters to life, he uses an abrupt substitution splice, causing a quick jump from the pictures to the live human actors. Had the actors been better positioned in the poses of their drawn counterparts, this would not be a problem, but because the poses are a lot harder to keep for so long, it would have been far better for them to have kept the poses they did in the final product and use a slow dissolve to transition the images smoothly. Although the drawings and the actors would still not have matched up quite as well, doing this would have disguised it a lot better, and made more sense in addition given the scenario of the film.
Nevertheless, it is the creativity that pulls off the film, and the result is a very humorous comedy far better than later ones by the filmmaker. In 1908, he and his team would split into two studios, A and B; Méliès would create films in A, while his production assistant and actor known as Manuel would direct films in B. Because none of the slapstick comedies turned out that year had this element of the fantastic along with the slapstick, the majority of those films are today regarded as failures (it also didn't help that without Méliès onscreen, none of the ones by Manuel came off as especially distinctive to his style). "The Hilarious Posters" is thus a success in that it uses its effects (albeit poorly done) as a way of executing a genuinely creative story, something Méliès needed more of to survive in those later years.
In "The Hilarious Posters", the filmmaker makes use of a concept he did numerous themes on throughout his career: the inanimate coming to life, in this case a wall of advertising posters becoming animated. It's an amusing little story, with some good elements of humor and a great finale, but, as other reviewers have already pointed out, the execution of the effects is rather sloppily pulled off. For Méliès, preventing this could easily have been a case of better judgement: to bring the posters to life, he uses an abrupt substitution splice, causing a quick jump from the pictures to the live human actors. Had the actors been better positioned in the poses of their drawn counterparts, this would not be a problem, but because the poses are a lot harder to keep for so long, it would have been far better for them to have kept the poses they did in the final product and use a slow dissolve to transition the images smoothly. Although the drawings and the actors would still not have matched up quite as well, doing this would have disguised it a lot better, and made more sense in addition given the scenario of the film.
Nevertheless, it is the creativity that pulls off the film, and the result is a very humorous comedy far better than later ones by the filmmaker. In 1908, he and his team would split into two studios, A and B; Méliès would create films in A, while his production assistant and actor known as Manuel would direct films in B. Because none of the slapstick comedies turned out that year had this element of the fantastic along with the slapstick, the majority of those films are today regarded as failures (it also didn't help that without Méliès onscreen, none of the ones by Manuel came off as especially distinctive to his style). "The Hilarious Posters" is thus a success in that it uses its effects (albeit poorly done) as a way of executing a genuinely creative story, something Méliès needed more of to survive in those later years.
Hilarious Posters, The (1906)
*** (out of 4)
aka Les Affiches en goguette
This here remains one of Melies best known works due in large part to it being shown on countless compilations as well as various free sites (like Youtube). The film has a billboard showing off various people and it quickly comes to life before going back to the billboard. In a twist, the billboard jumps back to life so that those on it can throw things at the man making money off of it. This type of trick show really isn't anything new from Melies but it still works simply because of the charm. The movie runs a quick three-minutes and manages to get a few nice laughs but the technology of the trick shot is pretty low-key especially when compared to some of the work the director was doing even earlier than this.
*** (out of 4)
aka Les Affiches en goguette
This here remains one of Melies best known works due in large part to it being shown on countless compilations as well as various free sites (like Youtube). The film has a billboard showing off various people and it quickly comes to life before going back to the billboard. In a twist, the billboard jumps back to life so that those on it can throw things at the man making money off of it. This type of trick show really isn't anything new from Melies but it still works simply because of the charm. The movie runs a quick three-minutes and manages to get a few nice laughs but the technology of the trick shot is pretty low-key especially when compared to some of the work the director was doing even earlier than this.
Another bizarre little tale from the warped imagination of French pioneer Georges Melies, this short film lacks his usual smooth technique but compensates by delivering a truly original and entertaining piece of nonsense.
The action centres around a set of posters that come to life and interact with each other and, eventually, on passers-by. The police get involved and it's not long before the arm of the law is being pelted with flour and soaked with liquor. Although the use of stop-motion here is a little ragged, Melies pretty much gets as much mileage as it is possible to get out of a wall full of posters...
The action centres around a set of posters that come to life and interact with each other and, eventually, on passers-by. The police get involved and it's not long before the arm of the law is being pelted with flour and soaked with liquor. Although the use of stop-motion here is a little ragged, Melies pretty much gets as much mileage as it is possible to get out of a wall full of posters...
I would retitle this the not very funny posters. It's the same old idea of a set of eight posters, with various subjects, coming to life. It's just that the things they do aren't very interesting. They dump stuff on people. They fight. Melies came a long way in his films. A few of these later ones just don't cut the mustard.
One fun and funny well liked and good short is "The Hilarious Posters" from 1906! Long before the days of "Amazon", "Ebay", or window shopping at "J. C. Penny", "Macy's", or "Victoria Secret's", or just cart shopping at "Wal Mart" or "Target" or even shopping at an auction or flee market this was the way people shopped they were lured into products by the art they saw on poster walls! However this short takes a clever and unique fun twist all of a sudden the advertising comes alive to send it's message to by passers! Also look for some parody as some "Keystone Cop" like characters are featured. Overall well done classic enjoyable short that sends a message to customers.
Did you know
- TriviaIncluded in the "Georges Melies: First Wizard of Cinema (1896-1913)" DVD collection, released by Flicker Alley.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Une séance Méliès (1997)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- The Hilarious Posters
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime3 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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