The Haunted Castle 1896 George Melies Silent Film

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024
  • The Haunted Castle 1896 Silent Film. Early Geoge Melies filmed.
    Le Manoir du diable (English: The Haunted Castle) is a three-minute-long French film directed by Georges Méliès. The film contained many traditional pantomime elements and was intentionally meant to amuse people, rather than frighten them. Nonetheless, it is considered to be the first horror film.
    In English, this film has been known as The Haunted Castle, The Devil's Castle, The Devil's Manor, and The Manor of the Devil. It was released on Christmas Eve, 1896, at the Theatre Robert Houdin, 8 boulevard des Italiens, Paris.

Komentáře • 835

  • @jackd.flippin6656
    @jackd.flippin6656 Před 9 lety +1624

    Considering this movie is almost 120 years old, I think the quality is great and the effects are well made.

    • @dimitricrotchlickmeoff3831
      @dimitricrotchlickmeoff3831 Před 9 lety +6

      Jack Flippin yeah if you like black and white

    • @graneadear
      @graneadear Před 9 lety +41

      Jack Flippin ya considering it is the first horror film I can see how others emulated it in later works in the 1930s (Lon Chaney, Sr. and Lon Chaney, Jr., Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, and Vincent Price era movies) and even today people don't understand horror as a genre is made crappy to poke fun at our fears and also to give us a release of emotions that we sometimes need just a conclusion mind you I happen to be writing about it though as I see it as a curiosity that should be examined

    • @notrealpolandball3531
      @notrealpolandball3531 Před 7 lety +1

      Jack Flippin is not horror movie (is comedy film)

    • @KanOfSoda
      @KanOfSoda Před 7 lety +12

      Ikr they did pretty well for starters

    • @PlasticGirl65
      @PlasticGirl65 Před 7 lety +2

      doge br666 He never said it was a horror movie, Michael Lachnicht did.

  • @GBGdevotie
    @GBGdevotie Před 10 lety +730

    Can you imagine how freaked out people would have been by this back in 1900, with barely any public knowledge of what special effects were or how they worked? I've read that audiences in the first movie theaters flinched and tried to keep from getting wet when they saw footage of waterfalls.

    • @ihavenocontent9310
      @ihavenocontent9310 Před 10 lety +58

      ***** They Thought that the train was going to come through the screen and crash into the cinema.

    • @eternallyconfusedneveraware
      @eternallyconfusedneveraware Před 10 lety +23

      ***** Not sure if that would be hilarious, diabolical, or both!

    • @mazzpsykoziz
      @mazzpsykoziz Před 9 lety +4

      The White Wolfos Both.
      Or maybe I am just a bit sadistic xD

    • @graneadear
      @graneadear Před 9 lety

      GBGdevotie They probably thought it was magic

    • @lightonthehill8548
      @lightonthehill8548 Před 5 lety +82

      Not trying to be rude or anything, but I study film in university, and we were told that the story of the people being afraid of being hit by a train the Lumiere brothers had filmed was probably exaggerated. The people probably knew they weren't in any danger, but pretended that they were to enter into the spirit of seeing this, and besides, their gasps of surprise may have been accidentally or purposefully misinterpreted. If it's the latter, it's probably because it makes a good story. We were told, 'Beware of the assumption that people who lived in the past were idiots because they know less than we do.' So, yeah. Just wanted to put that out there.

  • @Lifelong_Lesson
    @Lifelong_Lesson Před 10 lety +635

    This is sick for 1896.
    George Melies is considered the father of special effects, so then again, it's not really too surprising.
    Melies was incredible. Way beyond his time!

    • @craigmartin3827
      @craigmartin3827 Před 5 lety +8

      Agreed. An amazing innovator, especially because so many of his ideas recur in today's filmmaking. I can't help thinking of Kubrick's The Shining (and later, Neil Jordan's High Spirits, which is in its own way a love letter to Méliès) when the man goes to kiss the hand of the young lady and she transforms into an old hag. But horror has been around since forever. Someone recently pointed out to me that the book of Judges in the Bible contains some very sick and twisted imagery and they were right. A women murders her husband by hammering a tent pole through his head and into the ground while he is sleeping. An obese man is stabbed to death while he's doing his business on the toilet and his assassin loses his dagger amongst the folds of fat and gore that close around the blade and hilt. Bronze Age horror.

    • @loge10
      @loge10 Před 3 lety +1

      What a cynical perspective - you must be a lot of fun to be around. Besides it's not whether you invented it but how you used it. DW Griffith didn't invent much of what he's credited for (although he was first in some things) but it's what he did with it that was his genius.

    • @JoeyB0b
      @JoeyB0b Před 3 lety

      Not really. Star wars had better special effects and its special effects werent even good.

    • @littlebiscuit2004
      @littlebiscuit2004 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JoeyB0b yeah ofc Star Wars had better effects but that was only because it came out later in time. Were just saying that this movie had great effects for a movie that came out 1800’s.

    • @niyatirichhariya7303
      @niyatirichhariya7303 Před 2 lety +5

      @@JoeyB0b well I think star Wars first movie was released roughly after 81 years of this movie?

  • @forestf4irys
    @forestf4irys Před 10 měsíci +36

    okay, but i'm actually very invested in this. it's been 127 years, we need a part two!

  • @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control
    @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control Před 7 lety +312

    Y'know, 30 years ago, it wasn't a foregone conclusion that everyone in these early films was dead. Now? Absolutely dead. There probably isn't a film made before 1910 with a single living cast or production member.
    But the fact that we still have video records of people in the 19th century? That's just damn cool. It's almost criminal how little effort went into film preservation back in those days.

    • @9753Lukas
      @9753Lukas Před 5 lety +33

      I mean to be fair, anyone who was in a film in 1896 has probably been dead much longer than 30 years.
      Lets say these actors were around 25-30 in 1896. That means they were born in the late 1860's/early 1870's. If they lived to be 100 they would still have still been dead for almost 50 years.

    • @Magnetron33
      @Magnetron33 Před 4 lety +12

      Gone With The Wind star Olivia De Haviland is 104 today!

    • @lukedavis5659
      @lukedavis5659 Před 4 lety +10

      Magnetron33 she died 3 days ago on 26th July 2020 RIP.

    • @Magnetron33
      @Magnetron33 Před 4 lety +5

      @@lukedavis5659 Norman Lloyd hates to see younger people go.

    • @loge10
      @loge10 Před 3 lety +8

      I'm this and I'm still around; I'm the bat - it was my first role!

  • @librarian66
    @librarian66 Před rokem +34

    126 years old and this is still a remarkable piece of film. Melies was an artist and then some.

  • @eduardogabriel1999
    @eduardogabriel1999 Před 8 lety +1958

    Only 90s kids remember this

  • @rotciv1492
    @rotciv1492 Před 9 lety +247

    How many people are complaining about the sound? xD this is hilarious.

    • @limechecksout
      @limechecksout Před 9 lety +2

      ikr XD

    • @BillG37
      @BillG37 Před 8 lety +6

      My only complaint is the fact that people weren't smart enough back then to have the technology we have today. :p

    • @romancotton8536
      @romancotton8536 Před 8 lety +38

      Its not that they were any less smart....if anything our generation has piggy backed every other generations achievements. I think the majority of egyptian architects were smarter than 97 percent of modern humans. We improve on things maybe but nothing new under the sun

    • @BlazeMaster
      @BlazeMaster Před 7 lety +12

      well actually most silent movies come with some score nowadays, so it's not too surprising. Still this how you should legally post public domain films, as it's only the image that is in public domain and not the score used in some releases.

    • @mrexcelsior1414
      @mrexcelsior1414 Před 4 lety +1

      People are goofy nowadays lol

  • @iammarwanyo
    @iammarwanyo Před 10 lety +322

    Scarier than most of the movies I've ever seen. Imagine how scared people must've been in 1896.

    • @yoshij
      @yoshij Před 4 lety +4

      iammarwanyo there must have been a period between now and 1896 that people thought it looked cheesy, when special effects looked better and they weren’t so far removed from the time period it was made

    • @johnathanrodriguez445
      @johnathanrodriguez445 Před 4 lety +5

      They weren't because it was made to be scary it was mad to be comedic

    • @ivanovv__3
      @ivanovv__3 Před 2 lety +4

      I read that this was supposed to be actually comedy sketch. This was actually funny to the people back then. But this contains characters that most horror movies have, so it is counted as the first horror movie made in 1896.

  • @xxhumanoidgirlxx
    @xxhumanoidgirlxx Před 11 lety +57

    It's been more than 120 years and I find this film amazing. I'm admired by the skills they had already in this age :)

  • @Pavlinka__
    @Pavlinka__ Před 8 lety +281

    The fact that everyone who worked on this is now dead is kinda spooky too.

    • @duckbrew
      @duckbrew Před 8 lety +13

      no shit?!

    • @101Volts
      @101Volts Před 7 lety +24

      While there are no people alive now from that year that I know of there have been some people living past the age of 115.

    • @CallicoJackracham
      @CallicoJackracham Před 7 lety +16

      the oldest person ever was a French woman who lived to become 122 so technically it could have been possible but the last person born before 1900 was the Italian Emma Morano who died on the 15th of April of this year

    • @elenitampaka3723
      @elenitampaka3723 Před 3 lety +5

      uhhmm most likely their children and quite possibly their grandchildren too ..think about it if this was made in 1896 and lets assume that someone there juuuuust had a newborn baby, and lets assume that baby around 25 had their first kid (pretty usual back then) that mean their grandchild would be born around 1921...and if theyre still allive now theyd be 99 years old ...sooo we're probably looking at great grandkids somewhere in their 70's!

    • @FrankDaBank25
      @FrankDaBank25 Před 2 lety

      Even spoopy some might say

  • @boltarstigmata
    @boltarstigmata Před 8 lety +87

    Not bad at all for a movie made in 1896. It's still entertaining today.

  • @gabbyeeee
    @gabbyeeee Před 3 lety +69

    ive been very unmotivated lately. the situations in my life have really taken a toll on my creativity. two weeks ago, my video class assigned me to make a story line but the emptiness in me stopped me from doing it. but oh my god, for some reason this three minute film has sparked a huge inspiration in me. after commenting this, im going straight to word and im going to write a killer story line.

    • @fryingwiththeantidote2486
      @fryingwiththeantidote2486 Před 3 lety +2

      how'd it go?

    • @tobinsen99
      @tobinsen99 Před 3 lety +9

      @@fryingwiththeantidote2486 the killer story line was so good, it killed him

    • @sleeplessstudios7626
      @sleeplessstudios7626 Před 2 lety +2

      Inspiration is odd like that

    • @bobbysands6923
      @bobbysands6923 Před rokem +3

      I beg you to keep going. It's normal to feel that way sometimes---we live in sad times. But all you need is a little inspiration and it can get you going, and change your life. Nothing film or video to do that--been doing this since 1985 and now I teach it. Good luck and God bless you.

    • @gabbyeeee
      @gabbyeeee Před rokem +1

      @@bobbysands6923 thank you very much

  • @sandylivingston7655
    @sandylivingston7655 Před 9 lety +38

    1896 WOW! 119 years! This is the oldest film I have ever seen.I am a Great fan of The director Georges Melies. This Picture badly needs to be restored, but I loved it. At first I thought the witches were ghosts because they were all in white then I saw the brooms. The skeleton scared me. It was a beautiful Horror film. I can see people in 1896 sitting in the theater and being scared. Some maybe screaming like we do in horror films..

  • @Christbepraised
    @Christbepraised Před 5 lety +24

    Tragic tragic shame he later destroyed so much of his work. The guy was brilliant

  • @courvoisibean
    @courvoisibean Před 4 lety +26

    Incredibly advanced film for the time, they were usually 50 seconds long of a street scene, this actually has characters, a plot and special effects

  • @brnleague99
    @brnleague99 Před 8 lety +110

    A bat-to-vampire transformation that predates DRACULA (written a year later)? Nice.

    • @lightonthehill8548
      @lightonthehill8548 Před 5 lety +6

      I just checked this and it's true! That's awesome!

    • @ryw8335
      @ryw8335 Před 5 lety +3

      Is he a vampire, though? He's out in seeming daylight and doesn't suck anyone's blood. He's looks more like a devil to me.

    • @justbeyondthecornerproduct3540
      @justbeyondthecornerproduct3540 Před 4 lety +3

      @@ryw8335 He recoiled at the cross though

    • @ryw8335
      @ryw8335 Před 4 lety +2

      @@justbeyondthecornerproduct3540 but wouldn't a devil do the same?

    • @NosyMuggle
      @NosyMuggle Před 4 lety +9

      The vampires existed in literature and folklore long before Bram Stoker's Dracula.

  • @dhucke4assembly
    @dhucke4assembly Před 9 lety +18

    I'm so glad they preserved these films !

  • @marcusvassiliou3501
    @marcusvassiliou3501 Před 7 lety +31

    was it supposed to be horror? so many perfectly timed, slapstick moments that I watched it as a comedy. Hard to imagine creating this without the 120 years of cinema we've seen since. what a mind to even conceive these ideas and commit them to a medium which most people of the age probably considered a silly novelty. visionary.

    • @iamnothale
      @iamnothale Před rokem +2

      Probably not meant to be "scare you" type of horror, but could still be consider one, since it is meant to elicit fear to the audience.
      Specifically the scene of the back poking devil and the sudden appearance of a skeleton.

    • @SmartStart24
      @SmartStart24 Před rokem

      I giggled when he sat on the skeleton 🤭

    • @RebeccaQueen-ti1bk
      @RebeccaQueen-ti1bk Před měsícem

      ​@@SmartStart24don't die as a disbeliever

    • @RebeccaQueen-ti1bk
      @RebeccaQueen-ti1bk Před měsícem

      ​@@iamnothaledon't die as a disbeliever

    • @RebeccaQueen-ti1bk
      @RebeccaQueen-ti1bk Před měsícem

      Dog not allowed ect

  • @LordSandwichII
    @LordSandwichII Před 7 lety +34

    Back then, few people knew how motion pictures worked. There was an element of mystery and magic that we kind of lost in today's movies.
    That said, these films are in the past, and the movies we have now are far better in terms of their ability to create illusions; but we must never forget the work that the pioneers did to pave the way for what have now!

  • @bartstewart8644
    @bartstewart8644 Před 9 lety +22

    Good grief, there are a lot of cliches of modern horror movies in this relic from 1896!!! The bat who turns into the devilish figure in the black cape. That got copped directly for Dracula, and a thousand other horror movies afterwards. He even gets chased away with a crucifix at the end! The hunchbacked assistant. The ghostly brides. Amazing.

    • @kristina80ification
      @kristina80ification Před 9 lety +2

      the bat and the crucifix has been a staple of horror since Drackula, the novel, also this film was meant for amusement and humor and is actually making fun of tropes that already existed in stories.

    • @TimThomason
      @TimThomason Před 9 lety +4

      Kristina This movie predates the novel Dracula by about a year. Many of the tropes, of course, are older than the novel and this film.

    • @kristina80ification
      @kristina80ification Před 9 lety

      yeah, I probably shouldn't have said "since Dracula" since I was really only using it as an example. The way I word things could use some work to be honest.

    • @graneadear
      @graneadear Před 9 lety

      Tim Thomason What about John Polidori's "Vampyre"? "The Vampyre" is a short work of prose fiction written in 1819 by John William Polidori

    • @graneadear
      @graneadear Před 9 lety +2

      Tim Thomason Bram Stoker got his idea directly from John Polidori's short story which was written at the same time as Mary Shelley's The Modern Prometheus aka Frankenstein was being written, actually at the same contest at Lake Geneva

  • @TheMasterLewy
    @TheMasterLewy Před 9 lety +61

    2:56 he almost knocks the stage over haha xD

  • @JHJNC89
    @JHJNC89 Před 4 lety +4

    This was actually way ahead of its time with special effects

  • @Dragonrider1227
    @Dragonrider1227 Před 8 lety +56

    the effect in 1:12 is actually pretty good

    • @BrianPhantom27
      @BrianPhantom27 Před 7 lety +2

      It was pretty good back in those year, Now this year, we got freaking CGI, green/blue screen, and photoshop

    • @Dragonrider1227
      @Dragonrider1227 Před 7 lety +8

      I see nothing wrong with that but it's impressive what they were able to do without it

    • @katerinag9512
      @katerinag9512 Před 6 lety

      BrianPhantom27 Lol

  • @brdrfaar5846
    @brdrfaar5846 Před rokem +11

    Don't worry, you're not the only one who is watching this masterpiece in 2024

  • @ashwhitecloud
    @ashwhitecloud Před rokem +3

    Quite delightful for when it was made. 126 years old and entertaining.

  • @stevenhulbert7540
    @stevenhulbert7540 Před rokem +4

    Appreciated Melies films before I was a film student. His creativity was unmatched. The in-camera effects were well done and he was way ahead of his time, such an amazing filmmaker.

  • @namashijabar5428
    @namashijabar5428 Před 2 lety +6

    I was invited to the premiere of this film when it came out. I got autographs from some of the actors and the director also. It was a grand party. We all got high and merry... This film was a major box office success back then and money was flowing like water. Good times!

  • @davyhenry8985
    @davyhenry8985 Před rokem +1

    For a film that is 126 years old the special effects are great

  • @WordUnheard
    @WordUnheard Před 11 lety +8

    This is it. This is THE first horror movie. Seems so tame in comparison to what has come afterwards. Can you imagine the insane terror that would have filled the minds of the audience who showed up to watch this in 1896, if the movie shown was actually The Exorcist?

  • @JunkyardHounds
    @JunkyardHounds Před 7 lety +7

    I turned the volume up as soon as the film started.

  • @georgyorgy2
    @georgyorgy2 Před 9 lety +175

    I CAN'T HEAR THE SILENT FILM

    • @silentfilmhouse
      @silentfilmhouse  Před 9 lety +15

      georgyorgy2 true

    • @edgarallanlovecraft5485
      @edgarallanlovecraft5485 Před 9 lety +38

      georgyorgy2 Maybe you should LISTEN HARDER!!!!!!!

    • @alexwallberg5607
      @alexwallberg5607 Před 8 lety +8

      +Edgar Allan Lovecraft LOL!

    • @coachfb18
      @coachfb18 Před 8 lety +5

      Thats why they are called silent films moron! There is no sound... You got to be kidding me! Lmao... Nothing like making a fool out of yourself in front of the whole world

    • @edgarallanlovecraft5485
      @edgarallanlovecraft5485 Před 8 lety +29

      +coachfb18 Really? lol...maybe you should look up "sarcasm"...and if that's too hard don't even TRY "irony"

  • @TheWickerMan1981
    @TheWickerMan1981 Před 8 lety +22

    Look at any silent film on youtube and enjoy seeing 2/3 of the people making the same "joke" about now being able to hear it. So funny... O_O

  • @DavidLeighWallis
    @DavidLeighWallis Před 10 lety +129

    2:58 the set almost falls down hahahah

    • @FenceDaGreat
      @FenceDaGreat Před 10 lety +5

      Good eye! But Méliès was such a quick-thinker that he was able to use the stop trick to take the time to fix the set while seamlessly blending it in with the story.

  • @anonymous-df8nd
    @anonymous-df8nd Před 2 lety +12

    Film roll family 🤩

  • @danishhakim994
    @danishhakim994 Před 7 měsíci +24

    Anyone from 2024?

  • @drterminator
    @drterminator Před 4 lety +5

    It’s not only a revolutionary film, but a classic.

  • @rojaraja1
    @rojaraja1 Před 2 lety +7

    Thanks bro 📽️ film roll tamil
    தமிழ்

  • @garyfrancis6193
    @garyfrancis6193 Před rokem +2

    The acting and camera work were superb.

  • @makmakmak5048
    @makmakmak5048 Před 2 lety +4

    A legend once said there’s only a tiny gap between comedy and horror

  • @hollymarg
    @hollymarg Před 9 lety +3

    Amazing that it is almost 120 years old. The movement is quite fluid in comparison to later films at the turn of the century. Thanks for sharing.

  • @sangielissa
    @sangielissa Před 12 lety +2

    I had many of these - the full length features.They were here on You Tube and the full length features should be here, somewhere. Especially, the cartoons. Truly epic.

  • @hollyruth92
    @hollyruth92 Před 13 lety +3

    "In 1896, the first horror film was shot. It was only three minutes long but it proved that fear could be contained and retold countless times. The Devil's Castle scared it's audience and gave them a taste of what horror films would be in the future." -Devin Watson- Horror film screenwriter in his book "Horror Screenwriting. The Nature of Fear." Chapter 1, Page 2.
    I believe it was the first horror film made, and it was made by the French. It's great that you have this on here, I was curious as

  • @magenta5768
    @magenta5768 Před 3 lety +3

    Imagine being a kid (10 years old or younger maybe) back then and watching this with your parents, it should've been pretty scary (for people in general, maybe scarier for kids) to see this in a dark room

  • @barrysiegel1656
    @barrysiegel1656 Před 4 lety +3

    AT 2:59 the actor bumps into the right side of the screen temporarily making the set go askew for a couple of seconds. I'm not nit-picking, just pointing this out as I enjoyed the film immensely.

  • @Boopathi_19984
    @Boopathi_19984 Před 2 lety +9

    யாரெல்லாம் 2022 ல இந்த படத்த பார்க்கிறீர்கள்

  • @symphonyofanera
    @symphonyofanera Před 12 lety +4

    it was a smart film, i enjoyed it because over 130 films like it were lost in the 1960s volt fire in the ibm, this would have been a rear copy that would have been in someones private collection and then handed it in

  • @billybletsos4758
    @billybletsos4758 Před 2 lety +6

    To be honest, this will be known as the first ever horror film in screen history. Such an old theme

  • @alejandreitor10
    @alejandreitor10 Před 12 lety +2

    I am overjoyed seeing this amazing film, it is incredible how this director was ahead at his age and his imagination, i wish i could have lived in this age and seeing it for the first time, it lift me up.

  • @TheTetrap
    @TheTetrap Před 12 lety +2

    wow this is vintage, i mean i had seen the classic like caligari, phantom of the opea and nosfuratu, even the 1910 frankenstein but this is what the first ever horror film, thats just awsome.

  • @orphanprince5926
    @orphanprince5926 Před 7 lety +2

    I can now officially say that I've seen the first horror film in history! I've seen almost every major horror movie in history and now I've seen the first!

  • @emilys3458
    @emilys3458 Před rokem +2

    Simply wonderful!

  • @antonpictures
    @antonpictures Před 10 lety +8

    lol, I was trying to put the volume up, till I realized sound didn't come to movies till 1900, and wasn't actually used til the 1920's when they started to actually get it working properly.

  • @Galaxius2117
    @Galaxius2117 Před 5 lety +3

    Amazing how they can recover footage from more than 100 years old.

  • @Hotchocolaterabbit
    @Hotchocolaterabbit Před 10 lety +2

    Considering this is nineteenth century film it's pretty amazing.

  • @GlenJ57
    @GlenJ57 Před 3 lety +2

    My Grandfather was 24 years old when this movie came out.

  • @froggy9191
    @froggy9191 Před 12 lety +2

    Thank you so much for uploading this!!!

  • @mr.m4n446
    @mr.m4n446 Před 2 lety +2

    Melies is the Grandfather of 'Special Effects', he created and developed fades/dissolves, multi-imaging and in camera appearance/vanishes.

  • @marianmarian6177
    @marianmarian6177 Před 5 lety +4

    What?? 123 years ago.OMG!!😲😲

  • @benjaminphoenix1
    @benjaminphoenix1 Před 10 lety +154

    still better love story than twilight

  • @cesarbayona8778
    @cesarbayona8778 Před 4 lety +2

    Considering this movie is from 1896, the effects are really well made. Audiences at the time probably got really scared with this.

  • @justmanic9673
    @justmanic9673 Před 7 lety +8

    Ahhh! Blooming heck! You could have warned me about the horror before I watched this, I almost had a heart attack

  • @ericmcclain1869
    @ericmcclain1869 Před 11 lety +6

    "The Haunted Castle was filmed in front of a live audience."

  • @ezrastardust3124
    @ezrastardust3124 Před 2 lety +4

    An alternate title for this film should be Mephistopheles Trolls The Shit Out Of A Random Guy For No Reason At All For Three Minutes

  • @rossi3200
    @rossi3200 Před 9 lety +3

    this is just wonderful! such a piece made. it felt like a mad magician playing pranks than haunted castles :P

  • @cliffsmogo
    @cliffsmogo Před 9 lety +33

    And then a skeleton popped out.

    • @adam422
      @adam422 Před 4 lety

      And then the winged hussars arrived

  • @samishahzad6160
    @samishahzad6160 Před 3 lety

    Wonderful superb great production George Melies and actor director legends in a history of movies. Rest in peace of All.

  • @sz-gn9id
    @sz-gn9id Před 10 měsíci +1

    Literally 127 year old movie, this is unfathomable.

  • @TimD.Morand
    @TimD.Morand Před 4 měsíci

    Lovely! Can you imagine how they would be amused at the fact that we're watching them in 2024??

  • @2009jadeorchid
    @2009jadeorchid Před 9 lety

    Cannot believe this film is almost 120 years old! Thank you for posting!

  • @Widkey
    @Widkey Před rokem

    I'm blown away! Way ahead of it's time and didn't cost 100 million dollars to make.

  • @user-sf9gs2pg1b
    @user-sf9gs2pg1b Před 11 měsíci

    Oh my gosh! This person must have been so passionate in filming, I can't imagine it would be easy to make a film in 1896! Imagine if they were making films today, that would be amazing.

  • @Miakhano
    @Miakhano Před 3 lety

    Nice to find 1896 movie and see special effects from the very beginning.

  • @Dedikkekangoeroe
    @Dedikkekangoeroe Před 9 lety +9

    Wasn't planning on sleeping anyways..

  • @airplanecarlovers7878
    @airplanecarlovers7878 Před 8 lety

    I see people sitting in the movie theater and be scared. This is a great silent horror Film! Loved it

  • @jeanmicheljoffres6475
    @jeanmicheljoffres6475 Před 2 lety +1

    Ces films sont extraordinaires. Avec peu de moyens Méliès a presque tout inventé dans l'art du cinéma.

  • @GehennaGirls
    @GehennaGirls Před 8 lety +30

    why on earth would a vampire have a cross on his wall?

    • @indiheath8180
      @indiheath8180 Před 8 lety +16

      +C Smith Same reason I have a god awful goat scrotum hanging in the living room, got it last Christmas from my aunt.

    • @Emma-cy4vw
      @Emma-cy4vw Před 8 lety +2

      +Jackson Pacchiana Depends on where their loyalties lie.

    • @BlazeMaster
      @BlazeMaster Před 7 lety +5

      first thing it's a Devil, second he probably stole the mansion from its rightful owners , cross included. Being the Devil he could not get rid off it too.

    • @nickp3949
      @nickp3949 Před 6 lety +1

      Vampires in 1896 were boss that's why

  • @duaneleach9675
    @duaneleach9675 Před rokem

    Films like this are amazing and incredible. We're actually looking back over 120 years ago these people animated. You look at the building and the rooms in there and everything is truly is scary. Of course to me when you look back the 1800s a lot of that seems a little spooky in itself. So when you get a glimpse back into those days and get to watch it live there's a creepy element to it. You step into the movie and it's a whole different world.

  • @mikereiss4216
    @mikereiss4216 Před rokem

    It's amazing that automobiles were barely around when this was being made. I'd say this was pretty groundbreaking for the time period.

  • @MFPhoto1
    @MFPhoto1 Před 4 lety +1

    Director Georges Melies also appears as the Devil in this film. His future second wife, Jehanne d'Alcy also appears.

  • @ShrunkedDude
    @ShrunkedDude Před 3 lety

    Cutting footage to make it look like something appeared/disapeared must've been really satisfying to play around with for the first time back then.

  • @blacknwhitecheckers
    @blacknwhitecheckers Před 9 lety +4

    so cool! thanks for posting!

  • @iac4357
    @iac4357 Před 2 lety +1

    Better than a lot of other Movies out there !

  • @bobbysands6923
    @bobbysands6923 Před rokem

    I teach film at the college level. I would be delighted if my students came back and showed me a film this inventive for a final project. Man, once he figured out how to stop the camera and keep it locked down while changing the action inside...he was off to the races. Like a kid in a candy store!

  • @Inediblehulk
    @Inediblehulk Před 12 lety +1

    That bat-to-count transition at 1:54 is smooth, even by 2012 standards. It must have blown some minds at the time. Especially those still recovering from the shock of moving pictures at all. Consider that some who saw this new art emerge were also around for the dawn of the Nintendo Entertainment System. And Castlevania.

  • @thunderkarla
    @thunderkarla Před 12 lety

    Very talented , its good to see that there still some people who appreciate it .

  • @dennisalters702
    @dennisalters702 Před 2 lety

    George Melies was a true creative pioneer, master showman and genius

  • @waddlejump
    @waddlejump Před 12 lety

    I found this quite amusing especially the bit where the chair kept moving. If only I was born back then. It's much more fascinating than I could have imagined! Thank you so much for putting this up.

  • @TheTristanmarcus
    @TheTristanmarcus Před rokem

    Fantastic, and from 1896 too 😎 Better and more interesting than the vast majority of contemporary Hollywood films 🤔

  • @emmaroombaasmr8036
    @emmaroombaasmr8036 Před 7 lety +33

    I tried to turn up the volume . . .

  • @ricardomodesto944
    @ricardomodesto944 Před 3 lety +2

    The running time of the film (more than 3 minutes) was considered almost impossible in 1896

  • @lilcasement
    @lilcasement Před 11 lety +1

    For 1896 this is really well done and looks good. I've seen films from 1900 that don't look as good

  • @sammavacaist
    @sammavacaist Před rokem +1

    This must have been mind blowing in 1896.

  • @WSOJ3
    @WSOJ3 Před rokem +1

    I like the CGIs used in this film.

  • @shmygolas
    @shmygolas Před 22 dny

    You understand that this is considered the OG horror movie? Without it we wouldn't have the genre itself

  • @shesh_o
    @shesh_o Před 15 dny +1

    Better plot than half the horror this time.

  • @jacobglueckert6597
    @jacobglueckert6597 Před 10 lety +9

    2:08 ghost on the left walks into a wall

  • @stemple11100
    @stemple11100 Před 4 lety +4

    Crazy to think when this was made, Queen Victoria was on the throne, and the original BOOK version of Dracula didn’t even exist yet

  • @agathabest2233
    @agathabest2233 Před 8 lety +2

    Wow, 3 minutes! I'm amazed it's intact.

    • @ryw8335
      @ryw8335 Před 5 lety

      Not sure if you're being sarcastic, but Melies made efforts to destroy all of his films because of career frustration. (He died as a candy salesman in Paris, after being a renowned magician and filmmaker). Less than half of his films remain, he made over 500 films and only around 200 still exist.

  • @romanbruni
    @romanbruni Před rokem +1

    brilliant invention of moviemaking ! cheers from Rio