I'm currently taking a class in French Cinema at the local university and a clip that we watched really interested me so I thought I'd share.
For those of you who have watched the film Hugo you know about George Melie. He was a magician who turned film director right as the technology was developing. He filmed the very popular film "A Trip to the Moon". He was a pioneer in special effects and we still use some of his methods.
The clip that I wanted to share is his version of the "Vanishing Lady" or "De Culta Chair". When we watch this film we disregard it as a camera trick. At the time though it was a legitimate method. Pay attention to how he puts a newspaper down on the floor to prove the absence of trap doors, how he bangs the chair on the ground to prove it is solid and how the lady moves to prove that she is real as well.
We look at this and say "What a dumb camera trick", on the contraryI believe that in the past this was probably a magician fooler.
[video=youtube;K4MnFACzKfQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4MnFACzKfQ[/video]
For those of you who have watched the film Hugo you know about George Melie. He was a magician who turned film director right as the technology was developing. He filmed the very popular film "A Trip to the Moon". He was a pioneer in special effects and we still use some of his methods.
The clip that I wanted to share is his version of the "Vanishing Lady" or "De Culta Chair". When we watch this film we disregard it as a camera trick. At the time though it was a legitimate method. Pay attention to how he puts a newspaper down on the floor to prove the absence of trap doors, how he bangs the chair on the ground to prove it is solid and how the lady moves to prove that she is real as well.
We look at this and say "What a dumb camera trick", on the contraryI believe that in the past this was probably a magician fooler.
[video=youtube;K4MnFACzKfQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4MnFACzKfQ[/video]