[DVD] Méliès the Magician
Documentary with 15 short films.
Released in 2002
Magician run in a sequence, with introductions and occasional comments by the late auteur's granddaughter, Madeline Malthête-Méliès. The shorts represent an actual program, Méliès' Magic Show, which was shown to a live audience with piano accompaniment. Though Malthête-Méliès' comments are periodically intrusive, the films themselves remain boisterous and funny, and still clever 100 years after their creation. In addition to the hour of shorts, Méliès The Magician includes 1997's two-hour documentary The Magic Of Méliès, directed by French film historian Jacques Meny. The documentary is overly dry at times, and it's been ordered with a confusing disregard for chronology: Meny addresses nearly all of Méliès' cinematic career before doubling back to relate anecdotes from his youth. The most effective scenes show how Méliès had certain films hand-tinted, or how he learned to cut his time-lapse tricks in mid-motion so as to better fool the eye, or how his elaborate studio (recreated in miniature for The Magic Of Méliès) was designed to house the meticulous stage-dressing which aided his illusions. Méliès went a long way for his modest effects, but his giddy experimentation and blatant theatricality are what make his trifling amusements so infectious, even today. His visionary movies show all the enthusiasm of a 13-year-old playing with a new camcorder.