Georges Meliès, born Marie-George-Jean Meliès (hey--he was
French--what do you expect???)
contributed more to
filmmaking as an
art than anyone who came after him. It was he who
introduced using film as a
catapault for the
imagination, not just a
drawingboard to mimic
reality.
Sadly, not many people today recognive this, & like many great minds of the past, he is forgotten.
In an attempt to help more understand his true
genius, one must understand who he was & where
he came from.
Born in
Paris on December 8, 1861, Georges Meliès did not grow up with a yearning to
work in the
cinema. In fact, the cinema wasn't even created yet. He did, however, show an interest in the
arts, especially
magic,
puppetry, &
stage design. But, his
parents wanted to him to hold an
understanding of the
English language before taking over his father's
shoe business, so he
continued his schooling in
London. After his father's retirement, Melies returned to Paris to run the
famliy business. This came at a opportune
time because he was then able to raise enough money
to buy the famous
Théâtre Robert-Houdin which was put up for sale in 1888.
In the Robert-Houdin, Meliès would put on shows featuring magic tricks & illusions, some he had
learned while in London, some coming from his own imagination. By this time, cinema had become a
reality. In 1895, he uses other's designs build his own
projector called the "Kinetograph."
Consequently, in 1896 he made his first
film, which he shows to an appreciative audience at the
Robert-Houdin. Meliès early films consist mostly of the main moviemaking objective of that
time--scenery.
The
event that turned Meliès' career around, and perhaps
moviemaking as a whole occured later
that year. As he was shooting a street scene to one of his movies, his
camera jammed. He took a
few seconds to fix it & was amazed to find out, upon development, the delay had
caused
men to turn into to women, and most intrueging to Meliès, a carriage to turn into a
hearse.
Thus the
trick stop was created. This technique abuses the
time-space reality of a film so that
what you see & what is really true are two completely different
things. Had it not been for this
chance occurance,
special effects may have never been created. This would obviously prove
tragic for such films as
Godzilla &
The Lost World because without special effects,
there would be no reason to see them. Meliès used the aforemention trick stop effect to
evolve into
many other complex cinematic tricks. These included
double-exposure,
split screen, and
scene
dissolving. Other than being a
pioneer in special effects, he also helped to introduce new aspects
to the theatre such as drama, advertising, & screen
nudity (a very controversial subject at that
time.)
Although extensively talented & creative, things did not go too well for Meliès. People begin to
think of Meliès' films as nothing more than
novelty and his competitors began to
rip him off.
These & other outside factors forced him to quit the movie industry in 1912. Shortly after, in 1915,
he reduced his studio back into a variety
theatre. Eventually, even the theatre was destroyed and
Meliès become
bankrupt. Meliès' life did have a happy ending, though. In 1926, Georges ran into
one of his early screen stars, Jeanne d'Alcy. They soon fell in love in got married. Also, in the late
twenties, the French people came to respect his work & he was awarded the
Legion of
Honor. As a plus he was also given a rent-free
apartment in Paris for the rest of his life. He died at age 77 on
January 21, 1938.