Conjuring | |
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Directed by | Georges Méliès |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | original running time unknown, but the film was 20 metres long. Only 6 seconds[1] remain. |
Country | France |
Language | Silent |
Conjuring (French: Séance de prestidigitation) is a 1896 French silent trick film directed by Georges Méliès, who is also the actor doing the "conjuring".
The film reproduces a magic act Méliès performed at his Paris theater-of-illusions, the Théâtre Robert-Houdin.[2]
Conjuring is Méliès's second film, and his first to move beyond the actuality film genre pioneered by the Lumière brothers and experiment with using the camera to capture a theatrical magic act. (Later in 1896, with his discovery of the substitution splice technique, Méliès was able to begin augmenting his theatrical illusions with new special effects unique to film.)[3] Conjuring can thus be seen as Méliès's first foray into the world of fiction film.[2]
The film was released by Méliès's Star Film Company and numbered 2 in its catalogues.[1]
In 2014,[4] the Cinémathèque française received a donation from the collector François Binétruy: a short fragment of chromolithographed animated film, rotoscoped from an unidentified 1896 Méliès film and showing Méliès himself performing a conjuring trick. Such fragments of animation had been manufactured from 1897 onward in Germany and France, for home use in toy projectors.[5]
In 2015, the Cinémathèque uncovered another fragmentary home-projector version of the same film, this time reproducing the original black-and-white live-action frames.[4] In July 2015, the film scholar Jacques Malthête identified the film as Georges Méliès's Conjuring.[4]