अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंFor any good comedy, you generally need at least two things to set the story in motion. In this case, you have a dog and you have a sausage. The dog wants the sausage. Others want to keep th... सभी पढ़ेंFor any good comedy, you generally need at least two things to set the story in motion. In this case, you have a dog and you have a sausage. The dog wants the sausage. Others want to keep the dog from the sausage. There are any number of ways this could go. However, since the dog... सभी पढ़ेंFor any good comedy, you generally need at least two things to set the story in motion. In this case, you have a dog and you have a sausage. The dog wants the sausage. Others want to keep the dog from the sausage. There are any number of ways this could go. However, since the dog gets the sausage at the very beginning, it means that we have a chase. THE RACE FOR THE S... सभी पढ़ें
- निर्देशक
फ़ोटो
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
That pretty much describes the chase comedy in Europe. Simple versions show up in 1904, and otherwise unadorned versions in 1914. The only variations are slight matters of geography -- there are no oceans for everyone to fall into here -- and what is being chased. Sometimes it's people, sometimes it's people on bicycles, and sometimes it's huge wheels of cheese that defy the laws of gravity and inertia. Here, at least, the dog's behavior makes sense, and if the other people behave like that fairy tale in which everyone is stuck to a stolen goose or anyone who is stuck to anyone holding the stolen goose..... Well, it's early days for a full reel of comedy chase.
It's not that the comedy chase died out. In the end, it became part of the grammar of movie comedy, something to end the movie on: full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
There's some dispute whether Alice Guy or some one else directed this. While accuracy is always good, the vehemence surprises me.
The film consists of some sort of poodle or poodle-mix stealing a long, long coil of sausages from the butcher shop (though it looks more like a rope). Suddenly, everyone in town is chasing the dog--almost like the people in "The Gingerbread Man" story from our youth. This makes the film unusual for an early Gaumont film, as the scenes change a lot during the course of the film. Not surprisingly for the era, the camera is totally stationary and inter-cutting is used extensively--not a roving camera lens.
It's all very slapstick and frantic. All in all, it's a bit overacted but quite fun--sort of like a French version of a Keystone comedy.
As highlighted in the documentary "Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché" (2018), this Gaumont film was quickly plagiarized by Pathé as "The Policeman's Little Run" (La Course des sergents de ville) (1907).
Alice Guy, in charge of production at Gaumont in 1906, was hugely overworked. By 1906 she had completed her masterpiece La Vie de Christ but her time was very largely taken up by the production of phonoscenes, sound films mainly based on operas and popular songs, which were for Gaumont a priority at this time. His engineers had developed a highly efficient sysem of semi-automated synchronisation and of amplification and Gaumont, believing - twenty years two early - that this was the future of film, intended to launch the "talkies" in a big way in 1907 in the hope (alas illusory) of breaking into the US market. During the year over a hundred such phonoscenes were made and, alhough Guy was not responsible for the sound recording, the playback performances, which required the actors to mime to the recordings, were tricky to make and must have been exceedingly time-consuming.
For the comic shorts, therefore, she relied increasingly heavily on her three new assistants, Louis Feuillade, who was the accredited scriptwriter, Étiene Arnaud and Roméo Bosetti. Although Guy was undoubtedly still in overall control, the content and style of the films increasingly represents the work of these three - particularly a strong emphasis on low comedy, on fashionable chase films (as in this film) and rather dubious toilet humour. There is no sign that Guy objected to any of this. She was no prude and seems rather to have enjoyed the laddish environment in which she now found herself.. She thought well of her assistants, especially Feuillade whom she would eventually designate as her successor when she left for the US.
The "rejuvenated" Guy fell in love with the younger Herbert Blaché in late 1906, the two were engaged on Christams Day and married on March 4th after which Guy immediately resigned her post in order to accompany Blaché who had been given the job of marketing the phonoscenes in the US.
The director of this film is not in fact known. The date can be inferred from the Gaumont catalogue which is chronological. It was made in about March 1907 (two films that immediately precede it in the cataogue are knwn to have been performed in London in April and one of them, Arnaud's La Ceinture Electrqieu, seems definitely to have been made after Guy's departure) and it is therefore most unlikely to have been made by Guy.
The probability then is that this film, written by Feuillade, would have been directed by one of the assistants - Feuillade himself, Arnaud or Bosetti. If my life depended on choosing one of them, I would say, on stylistic grounds, that it was probably directed by Bosetti.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIncluded on the "Alice Guy Blanche Vol. 1: The Gaumont Years" Blu-ray, released by Kino.
- गूफ़The number and order of the people chasing the dog changes from shot to shot, especially the children, who disappear and reappear once or twice.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché (2018)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- The Race for the Sausage
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि4 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण