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demifiendrsa · 6 months
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Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget | Official Trailer
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It’s Go Time! For Ginger and the flock, all is at stake when the dangers of the human world come home to roost; they’ll stop at nothing even if it means putting their own hard-won freedom at risk to save chicken-kind. This time, they’re breaking in!
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vintagewildlife · 5 months
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Archer fish catching its prey By: Pathé From: Natural History Magazine 1936
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edsmusicblog · 3 months
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yvonne legeay 11/3/1892 - 11/2/1980
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yvonne legeay -le nouveau milieu
1934
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princesssarisa · 1 year
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Sleeping Beauty Spring: "La Belle au Bois Dormant" ("The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood") (1908 French silent short)
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This 14-minute silent film was produced by the most famous French film studio of the silent era, Pathé. Directed by Albert Capellani and Lucien Nonguet, with an uncredited cast, it was filmed partly at the Pathé studio, and partly at the Château de Pierrefonds, an authentic medieval castle in Hauts-de-France that had recently been restored. Like many other French films of the era, it also serves as an early, primitive example of color film, via the process of stenciling. As a result, it has the look of an old-fashioned illustration – slightly crude, yet richly detailed and pretty all the same – come to life.
The story is told in a straightforward manner, easy to follow despite a lack of intertitles. The Princess, her royal parents, and their court wear medieval dress, while a hundred years later, the Prince and his companions wear clothes of the Cavalier era. The six good fairies are beautiful young women in slender, sleeveless gowns, and in a detail that seems inspired by Tchaikovsky's ballet, the fairy who softens the Princess's curse from death to sleep is portrayed as their leader and dressed in lilac. Meanwhile, the Evil Fairy is old and hunched yet still slightly glamorous, in a rich, pale blue gown and a tall witch-like hat. At the christening party, the Evil Fairy shows the court a vision of the Princess pricking her finger on a spindle and dying – a more effective choice in silent film than if she had just spoken the curse. Sixteen years later, we meet a bored and restless Princess confined to her bedroom by her protective parents, with guards at every door and only a devoted nurse for company. But when her nurse falls asleep, the Princess steals the key from her, evades the guards, and sets out to explore the castle... soon finding her way to a tower where an old women sits at a spinning wheel. As in most retellings, the old woman is the Evil Fairy in disguise.
While it's not emphasized, this seems to be a rare Sleeping Beauty that follows Perrault's version regarding the King and Queen's sad fate, where they don't join their daughter in sleep, but continue ruling the kingdom and eventually die before she wakes. They're last seen leaving the Princess's bedside after the Lilac Fairy puts the rest of the castle to sleep, and they don't appear in the finale. A hundred years later, on a hunt, the Prince learns of the sleeping Princess from an old man, and then finds that the forest of hedges surrounding the castle – the work of the Lilac Fairy – miraculously open to let him in. After wandering through the castle and seeing various members of the sleeping court, he finds the Princess and wakes her with a modest, gallant kiss on the hand. The Lilac Fairy then appears to bless their union, and the film ends abruptly with the newly awakened court and the other good fairies greeting the young couple.
Is this a definitive Sleeping Beauty? Far from it. The storytelling is basic and the filming techniques and special effects are primitive. But all the same, it's an intriguing and charming early example of an early cinematic fairy tale. The scenery and costumes are luxuriant, and even without sophisticated effects, some of the filmmakers' stylistic choices do enhance the fantastical atmosphere. For example, the superimposed image of a spider's web over the sleeping Princess's bed, indicating the long passage of time, which finally vanishes when the Prince enters the room.
This film can be viewed in several uploads on YouTube, most without music, but at least one set to the music of Tchaikovsky's ballet.
If you're eager to see what the earliest screen versions of classic fairy tales were like, then this short Sleeping Beauty is definitely worth your time.
@ariel-seagull-wings, @thealmightyemprex, @faintingheroine, @thatscarletflycatcher, @reds-revenge, @the-blue-fairie, @autistic-prince-cinderella, @paexgo-rosa, @comma-after-dearest
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View of the Pathé factory in Joinville-le-Pont, southeastern suburbs of Paris
French vintage postcard
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indochineofficiel · 1 year
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Central Tour : projection spéciale à l’occasion de la date anniversaire de la tournée des stades !
Une occasion unique de revoir le film du concert en IMAX en présence d'Indochine, le jeudi 1er juin à 21h30 au Megarama Bordeaux !
> Ouverture de la billetterie ce matin 10h sur bordeaux.megarama.fr !
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iconauta · 3 months
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The Life and Passion of Christ (1903) Ferdinand Zecca & Lucien Nonguet
The Life and Passion of the Christ (French: La Vie et la passion de Jésus-Christ ) is a film produced by Pathé in 1903 and directed by Ferdinand Zecca and Lucien Nonguet
The film tells the most important episodes in the life of Jesus in 35 scenes. It was the second film ever released in France about the life of Christ (the first one was The Passion of the Lumière brothers.
The direction of La Vie et la passion de Jésus-Christ had been entrusted to Lucien Nonguet under the supervision of Ferdinand Zecca, but when Pathé refused Zecca the opportunity to produce his own films, Zecca left the company to move to Gaumont, and Nonguet finished the film without his supervision anymore. 
The pictures in the film draw direct inspiration from the Bible illustrated by Gustave Doré; these, combined, form the first feature film in the history of cinema, but at the time, versions reduced to 12 or 20 pictures were marketed. 
The film is also the first full-length color film ever made. The new coloring system developed at Pathé was used for the occasion: the à pouchoir coloring: from an original copy of the film, silhouettes were cut out corresponding to the areas to be filled with a given color, which was applied to the film by means of a roller soaked in coloring substances.
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soulmusicsongs · 1 year
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Keleya - Moussa Doumbia (Keleya, 1977)
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edgarmoser · 1 year
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dani 1/10/1944 - 18/7/2022
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dani - albums 1967 - 2020
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taylorswiftfan1974 · 7 months
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Yes @taylorswift I can see you at Pathé Amsterdam 🩵🩵🩵🩵🩵
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demifiendrsa · 8 months
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Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget | Official Teaser
Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget will stream on Netflix on December 15, 2023.
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Synopsis
It’s Go Time! For Ginger and the flock, all is at stake when the dangers of the human world come home to roost; they’ll stop at nothing even if it means putting their own hard-won freedom at risk to save chicken-kind. This time, they’re breaking in!
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Vintage Poster - Riders Of The Purple Cows
Pathé (1924)
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regarde-la · 2 years
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Brigitte Bardot on the set of ‘Vie Privée’ (1962) by Louis Malle
By Pathé
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Now I get it when my dad would say to me "you will understand once you're older".
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princesssarisa · 1 year
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Coming up next in Sleeping Beauty Spring:
The 1908 Pathé silent film La belle au bois dormant.
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Chronologically, the next version on my list is Engelbert Humperdinck's opera Dornröschen from 1902. But the copy of the libretto I ordered won't arrive for a few more days, so I'm covering this short French film first.
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heracliteanfire · 1 year
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