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The Hilarious Posters

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Wikipedia article




'The Hilarious Posters' is a 1906 French short silent film by Georges Mlis. It was sold by Mlis's Star Film Company and is numbered 821823 in its catalogues.

Plot



On a large canvas-and-wood billboard, a man glues a poster showing two stars of 'L'Amour crdit', a show at the Parisiana music hall. It is surrounded by posters showing other figures, advertising various products: Poirot meat extract, Tripaulin paint, Nouveau Dpt porcelain, Poudre de Fes face powder, Quinquina au Cacao liqueur, Trouillottine lamps, and Mignon corsets. The man leaves, and two gendarmes pass by.

As soon as the coast is clear, the people shown in the posters begin coming to life. The two Parisiana stars leave their poster entirely and walk around, busily talking to the residents of the other posters. A fracas breaks out when one of the stars begins flirting with the corset model, and the porcelain vendor drops his wares onto the ground. The figures turn back into flat images as the gendarmes pass by again.

As a well-dressed gentleman crosses in front of the posters, they come alive again and begin throwing all their wares at him. The two gendarmes and two officers rush onto the scene, and all four are soon covered with face powder, powdered paint, and other products. The whole billboard comes toppling down with a crash, revealing the poster residents in real life behind a fence. As the police set the billboard to rights and look through the torn posters, they see all the poster residents dance happily off.

Production



'The Hilarious Posters' was probably commissioned by Victor de Cottens for showing as part of the 1905 edition of the annual Folies Bergre revue. (Though the descriptions of the show do not mention Mlis, he is credited in the program, and a scene closely resembling the action of the film is described in a surviving copy of the script.) The film may have been inspired by Gaston Velle's film 'La Valise de Barnum' (Path, 1904), in which a man shows various posters and the figures in them come to life.

Of the posters shown, "Tripaulin" parodies the paint brand Ripolin; "Mignon" may be the corset brand Mystre, for whom Mlis had made an advertising film; "Nouveau Dpt" is the Grand Dpt, a crockery shop; and the Parisiana was a real Paris music hall on the Grands Boulevards, run by the same producer who helmed the Folies, Paul Ruez. 'L'Amour crdit', the Parisiana show being advertised, had begun running on 26 August 1905.

Mlis appears in the film as the man who glues the posters, with Vilbert, one of the headlining acts at the Parisiana, playing himself on his poster. The special effects in the film are created by substitution splices and, for the Tripaulin poster, a carefully worked multiple exposure with the three painters filmed at a much greater distance than the rest of the action.

References




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