Autour d'une cabine ("Around A Cabin"), original full title Autour d'une cabine ou Mésaventures d'un copurchic aux bains de mer ("Around a Cabin or Misadventures of a Couple at the Seaside"), is an 1894 French short animated film directed by Émile Reynaud.[1] It is an animated film made of 636 individual images hand painted in 1893.[1] The film showed off Emile's invention, the Théâtre Optique. It was shown at the Musée Grévin from December 1894 until March 1900.[1]
Autour d'une cabine | |
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Directed by | Émile Reynaud |
Music by | Gaston Paulin[1] |
Color process | Hand painted |
Release date |
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Running time | 1 minute 50 seconds,[1] 10 minutes (as presented)[2] |
Country | France |
Language | Silent |
Plot
editThe film consists of a series of animations on a beach containing two beach huts and a diving board. Two characters play at diving into the water from the diving board and then appear on the beach. The woman begins to play with a small dog and is then joined by a gentleman. The two play around on the beach before getting changed into bathing costumes and going into the water. They bob up and down in the water before swimming out of the scene. Once the couple have gone, a man sails out in a boat. He unfurls the sail, which has written on it the words: "La représentation est terminée" (the show is finished).
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f "Autour d'une cabine (Around a Bathing Hut)". Retrieved 2021-05-22.
- ^ "The Optical Theater". Retrieved 2021-05-22.
External links
editMedia related to Autour d'une cabine at Wikimedia Commons
- Simplistic reconstruction on YouTube, note this does not show the film in the sequence or frame rate as it was shown in the 1890s
- Autour d'une cabine at IMDb