Repas De Bébé
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''Repas de bébé'' (also known as ''Le Repas de bébé,'' ''Le Repas (de bébé),'' ''Le Déjeuner de bébé,'' ''Baby’s First Meal,'' ''Baby’s Breakfast,'' ''Baby’s Lunch,'' ''Baby's Dinner,'' ''Baby's Tea Time,'' ''The Family Breakfast,'' ''A Baby's Meal,'' ''Feeding the Baby,'' and ''Feeding Baby'') is an
1895 Events January–March * January 5 – Dreyfus affair: French officer Alfred Dreyfus is stripped of his army rank, and sentenced to life imprisonment on Devil's Island. * January 12 – The National Trust for Places of Histor ...
French French (french: français(e), link=no) may refer to: * Something of, from, or related to France ** French language, which originated in France, and its various dialects and accents ** French people, a nation and ethnic group identified with Franc ...
short Short may refer to: Places * Short (crater), a lunar impact crater on the near side of the Moon * Short, Mississippi, an unincorporated community * Short, Oklahoma, a census-designated place People * Short (surname) * List of people known as ...
black-and-white Black-and-white (B&W or B/W) images combine black and white in a continuous spectrum, producing a range of shades of grey. Media The history of various visual media began with black and white, and as technology improved, altered to color. ...
silent
actuality film The actuality film is a non-fiction film genre that, like the documentary film, uses footage of real events, places, and things. Unlike the documentaries, actuality films are not structured into a larger argument, picture of the phenomenon or coh ...
photographed by
Louis Lumière Louis Jean Lumière (5 October 1864 Besançon – 6 June 1948, Bandol) was a French engineer and industrialist who played a key role in the development of photography and cinema. Early life and education Lumière was one of four children of ...
and showing his brother
Auguste Lumière Auguste Marie Louis Nicolas Lumière (19 October 1862 – 10 April 1954) was a French engineer, industrialist, biologist, and illusionist. During 1894–1895, he and his brother Louis invented an animated photographic camera and projectio ...
and his wife Marguerite feeding their infant daughter, Andrée Lumière. One of the earliest recordings made by the brothers Lumière, ''Le Repas de bébé'' (catalogued as Vue no. 88) is an unedited, single take of less than a minute's duration. The company's catalog described it as "Un papa fait avaler son déjeuner à un bébé" (a father feeds lunch r breakfastto a baby) and records that the scene was taken between March 22 and June 10, 1895. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière
Cinématographe Cinematograph or kinematograph is an early term for several types of motion picture film mechanisms. The name was used for movie cameras as well as film projectors, or for complete systems that also provided means to print films (such as the Cin ...
on December 28, 1895, at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capucines, Paris. It was the seventh of ten films on the program, each 17 meters long.


Production

As with all Lumière movies (1895 to 1905), this film was made in a
35 mm format 135 film, more popularly referred to as 35 mm film or 35 mm, is a format of photographic film used for still photography. It is a film with a film gauge of loaded into a standardized type of magazine – also referred to as a casse ...
with an aspect ratio of 1.33:1. Louis Lumière photographed the family trio using the newly-invented
Cinématographe Cinematograph or kinematograph is an early term for several types of motion picture film mechanisms. The name was used for movie cameras as well as film projectors, or for complete systems that also provided means to print films (such as the Cin ...
, a square box-like camera, which also served as a film projector and developer. The company's films had distinctive rounded corners, usually cropped out of video and still-image reproductions.


Synopsis

Auguste Lumière, his wife Marguerite, and their daughter Andrée sit at a dining table in the garden outside a house. The scene connotes the culture of a bourgeois family, with a silver tea service, a bottle of cognac, and fine clothing. Papa twice spoon-feeds their baby while Mama prepares and drinks a cup of tea. Both dote on the child and talk to her throughout. He then gives the infant a biscuit (cookie), which she seemingly offers to someone off-camera. The film ends as Auguste offers bébé a third spoonful.


Cast

* Andrée Lumière as Herself, 'Bébé' (Born in 1894, she died in Lyon aged 24, as a result of the
1918 flu pandemic The 1918–1920 influenza pandemic, commonly known by the misnomer Spanish flu or as the Great Influenza epidemic, was an exceptionally deadly global influenza pandemic caused by the H1N1 influenza A virus. The earliest documented case was ...
). *
Auguste Lumière Auguste Marie Louis Nicolas Lumière (19 October 1862 – 10 April 1954) was a French engineer, industrialist, biologist, and illusionist. During 1894–1895, he and his brother Louis invented an animated photographic camera and projectio ...
as Himself * Marguerite Lumière as Herself


Current status

According to Archives françaises du film documentation of 2004: "Pecuniary rights are owned until 2039 by the Association Frères Lumière. Non-pecuniary rights are held by the Lumière estate." ''Repas de bébé'' and all other surviving Lumière films are housed and preserved at France's Centre national de la cinématographie (CNC). The film was seen widely in Lumière Cinématographe shows around the world in 1896 and after. ''Repas de bébé'' has been included in a number of film, videotape, DVD, and Blu-Ray compilations including ''The Lumière Brothers' First Films'' (1996), ''Landmarks of Early Film volume 1'' (1997), and ''The Movies Begin: A Treasury of Early Cinema, 1894–1913'' (2002). It also forms part of the documentary ''
Visions of Light ''Visions of Light'' is a 1992 documentary film directed by Arnold Glassman, Todd McCarthy and Stuart Samuels. The film is also known as ''Visions of Light: The Art of Cinematography''. The film covers the art of cinematography since the concepti ...
'' (1992) and Ann Hu's Chinese feature film ''Shadow Magic'' (2000). In 2013, the British Film Institute copyrighted its reproduction, which streams via Alexander Street Press subscription service. Most definitively, in 2015 the Institut Lumière published it among the 114 films on the Blu-Ray and DVD set ''Lumière! Le Cinématographe 1895-1905.'' These digital renderings were 4K scans of the best available 35mm film copies (two negatives and three positive prints in the CNC's Archives françaises du film. Beginning in 2020, a variety of YouTubers posted digitally enhanced and altered versions of the footage. They used newly available AI and digital deep-learning tools to "up-res" videos, simulating 4K and 60 frames per second resolution. They commonly added artificial coloring, audio tracks, new titles, and cropping (making the original 4x3 aspect ratio into a 16x9 frame).


Legacy

The footage of the Lumière baby being fed has become an icon of early cinema. Resembling what would later be called a "home movie," it nevertheless made a memorable impression on its first audiences. In July 1896, Russian writer Maxim Gorky saw a Cinématographe program outside of Moscow and published an account that mentioned the film. Translated into English, Gorky's text ("Last night I was in the Kingdom of Shadows") refers to the film as ''The Family Breakfast.'' He describes it as ". . . an idyll of three. A young couple with its chubby first-born is seated at the breakfast table. The two are so much in love, and are so charming, gay and happy, and the baby is so amusing. The picture creates a fine, felicitous impression." Many historical and scholarly sources have described how some observers said they were captivated by the leaves on the trees moving in the wind. Pioneer filmmaker Georges Méliès told G.-Michel Coissac -- author of ''Histoire du cinematographe'' (1925) -- that he was at the first Paris screening in 1895, at which he and others were struck by the sensation of seeing the trees swaying in the wind. Gorky too said this in his 1896 article. In 2005, the UNESCO Memory of the World Register added the entry "Lumière Films," specifying this as a collection of all 1,405 extant works. By 1996, the CNC had preserved all of the original nitrate material on polyester safety film.Memory of the World Register, Lumière Films, 2004.


References


External links



Website by Manuel Schmalstieg (2013), ''L’œuvre cinématographique des frères Lumière'', which reproduces the catalog of all 1,423 known works published by the brothers' company. Data taken from '' La production cinematographic des Frères Lumière'', edited by Michelle Aubert and Jean-Claude Seguin (Paris: Bibliothèque du film; Diffusion, CDE, 1996).
Among the many online postings, Institut Lumière's YouTube channel published ''Demain, Le Cinéma!'' (Dec. 2020), its reproduction of the Salon Indien du Grand Café debut program of 1895. ''Le Repas (de bébé)'' appears as the seventh of ten movies (starting at 6:07 in).
*

Published as ''Repas de bébé (1895) Baby's Dinner (Lumière),'' Films by the Year YouTube channel, Sep. 24, 2020. {{DEFAULTSORT:Repas de bebe 1895 films French black-and-white films French silent short films Films directed by Auguste and Louis Lumière One-shot films 1890s short documentary films Black-and-white documentary films French short documentary films