A tone poem: two woodland sprites dance about, atop power lines and among flowers and leaves, while being pursued. Everyone spends some time pulling levers to switch trains, too.A tone poem: two woodland sprites dance about, atop power lines and among flowers and leaves, while being pursued. Everyone spends some time pulling levers to switch trains, too.A tone poem: two woodland sprites dance about, atop power lines and among flowers and leaves, while being pursued. Everyone spends some time pulling levers to switch trains, too.
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10tavm
Just watched this on the Europa Film Treasures site. It's an animated short from France and has sophisticated images of multiple electrical wires with two women dancing along on them, a man on a bike pursuing them, and some swans in a pond by a waterfall where the women go nude bathing. It's also accompanied by music that guides the animation to abstract places. Such a pleasure to see some of these rare treasures on the unique site I've visited quite often for some time now. They really offer some rare gems there! Despite being made some seventy-plus years now, La Joie de vivre really seems modern especially with the black-and-white look. Oh, and there's one final sequence involving trains that really has to be seen to be believed. So on that note, La Joie de vivre comes highly recommended.
La joie de vivre is a French film made by an English artist with financial backing from America, which makes it something of a mongrel. It's an exuberant, sophisticated animation drawn in an Art Deco style that is strangely reminiscent of those cartoons of the Beatles from Yellow Submarine and similar artwork from the late 60s and early 70s. It follows a couple of sassy young girls, all coltish legs and slim litheness as they commune with nature, engage in a little skinny-dipping and play with trains. As they play they are pursued by a young man on a bicycle; although initially elusive and unattainable, they eventually succumb to his charms and accept a coggy on his bike. There's something of the free spirit about this charming little film – and it highlights the different directions European and American schools of animation were taking in the early 1930s.
I watched this French cartoon on You Tube this morning and found it both interesting and entertaining.
There were no words spoken in the film - in any language. The story was told purely in haunting, melodious music and mime, which the French have always be very good at. Any one who has seen the more recent film, The Artist, will agree with that.
The animation was very lively and risque. It is a wonder the Hays Code at the time did not ban it from public viewing.
I have recently been researching television programmes that were broadcasted during the 1930s, and discovered that it was actually shown on BBC Television in 1938 on the 29th January at 3.25 in the afternoon. I wonder how the more reserved television viewers of the 1930s would have reacted to it.
In conclusion, I would like to say that the cartoon was well animated, very original and way ahead of its time.
10 out of 10.
There were no words spoken in the film - in any language. The story was told purely in haunting, melodious music and mime, which the French have always be very good at. Any one who has seen the more recent film, The Artist, will agree with that.
The animation was very lively and risque. It is a wonder the Hays Code at the time did not ban it from public viewing.
I have recently been researching television programmes that were broadcasted during the 1930s, and discovered that it was actually shown on BBC Television in 1938 on the 29th January at 3.25 in the afternoon. I wonder how the more reserved television viewers of the 1930s would have reacted to it.
In conclusion, I would like to say that the cartoon was well animated, very original and way ahead of its time.
10 out of 10.
Considering I now have over 9000 film reviews to my credit, I will apparently watch just about anything--and this sort of strange movie is certainly an odd one to review and qualifies for the "just about thing" classification! It is included as an odd little extra with the 1934 French film "Mauvaise Graine" ("Bad Seed").
"La Joie de vivre" ("The Joy of Life") is a very hard film to describe and I can guarantee that it's not a film most will enjoy. Despite being a cartoon, this ain't Popeye but an art film with strong Art Deco/Bauhaus/Art Nouveau influences...seriously. It is a black & white cartoon with very simple animation by today's standards. It consists of two nymph-like women cavorting about among freaking enormous flowers and a 'dangerous' man chasing them. There is no real narrative and the film is dialog-free. It's interesting...at first and probably mostly of interest to artists and niche viewers.
"La Joie de vivre" ("The Joy of Life") is a very hard film to describe and I can guarantee that it's not a film most will enjoy. Despite being a cartoon, this ain't Popeye but an art film with strong Art Deco/Bauhaus/Art Nouveau influences...seriously. It is a black & white cartoon with very simple animation by today's standards. It consists of two nymph-like women cavorting about among freaking enormous flowers and a 'dangerous' man chasing them. There is no real narrative and the film is dialog-free. It's interesting...at first and probably mostly of interest to artists and niche viewers.
Did you know
- TriviaAvailable on DVD, on The Strangest Cartoons Ever Made!: Volume 1, from Thunderbean.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Animated Century (2003)
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- Also known as
- The Joy of Life
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 9m
- Color
- Sound mix
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