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Lumière and Company is a 1995 anthology film made in collaboration between forty-one international film directors. The project consists in each of the filmmakers making a short film using the original Cinématographe camera invented by the Lumière brothers.

Lumière and Company FilmPoster

Shorts were edited in-camera and constrained by three rules:

  1. A short may be no longer than 52 seconds
  2. No synchronized sound
  3. No more than three takes

The results run the gamut from Zhang Yimou's convention-thwarting joke to David Lynch's bizarre miniature epic.

David Lynch's Contributions[]

  • David Lynch's ingenious show-stopper plays like a cross between “Creature from the Black Lagoon,””Intolerance” and the opening credits sequence from “Tucker.”Lynch packs his entire universe of wholesome/creepy juxtaposition into a 52-second continuous take, using elaborate sets, a clever camera rig, and choreography so tight that rehearsals must’ve been timed via atomic clock.

Details[]

  • Release Date: 20 December 1995 (France)
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Runtime: 
  • Writer: Philippe Poulet

Directors[]

  • David Lynch
  • Sarah Moon
  • Merzak Allouache
  • Gabriel Axel
  • Vicente Aranda
  • Theo Angelopoulos
  • Bigas Luna
  • John Boorman
  • Youssef Chahine
  • Alain Corneau
  • Costa-Gavras
  • Raymond Depardon
  • Francis Girod
  • Peter Greenaway
  • Lasse Hallström (starring Lena Olin)
  • Michael Haneke
  • Hugh Hudson
  • Gaston Kaboré
  • Abbas Kiarostami
  • Cédric Klapisch
  • Andrei Konchalovsky
  • Patrice Leconte
  • Spike Lee
  • Claude Lelouch
  • Merchant & Ivory (music by Richard Robbins)
  • Claude Miller
  • Idrissa Ouedraogo
  • Arthur Penn
  • Lucian Pintilie
  • Jacques Rivette (starring Nathalie Richard)
  • Helma Sanders-Brahms
  • Jerry Schatzberg
  • Nadine Trintignant
  • Fernando Trueba
  • Liv Ullmann (starring Sven Nykvist)
  • Yoshishige Yoshida
  • Jaco Van Dormael (starring Pascal Duquenne)
  • Régis Wargnier
  • Wim Wenders
  • Zhang Yimou

Plot[]

Romane Bohringer sought out fellow filmmakers, requesting that they shoot short movies on cameras similar to the one used by the French brothers. Each director is given access to the original Lumiere motion picture camera and about one minute of film time. The directors are also asked to comment on why they film and if they think cinema is mortal or not. Combining scenes from the Lumieres' first films with footage from the contemporary directors using the old equipment, the documentary shows just how much film-making has evolved in a century. An omnibus project that put an original Lumiere camera and homemade film stock into the hands of a broad cross-section of contemporary helmers, proves that the challenge of creating a hand-cranked 52-second movie via natural light and without synch sound remains a goal worth pursuing.

With a budget of 10 million francs ($ 2 million) and a tight deadline, artistic director Anne Andreu approached some 150 helmers worldwide, of whom 39 were both willing and available. Filming — in locations as far-flung as Los Angeles, Cairo, Ouagadougou, Johannesburg, Hiroshima and the Great Wall of China — was completed between July and early November of 1995. A skeleton crew was present to hand-crank the mini-pics and develop and contact-print them on the spot, using the versatile Cinematographe.

Contributions[]

  • Sarah Moon generated the compilation’s narrative glue in the form of still photo portraits and Hi-8 video “making of” segs in which the helmers are asked questions including “Why did you agree to do this? Will film as a means of expression endure? Why do you make movies?” A surprising number of participants are at a loss to articulate why they film, with Jacques Rivette literally speechless.
  • Each helmer and his or her chosen location is identified with simple titles before video docu footage shows us the director in the physical act of directing — the shifting expressions on helmers’ faces are often wonderful. Only then are we shown what it was they were shooting. The before/during/after approach injects much-needed suspense into what could otherwise have been a mostly academic exercise carried out by a distinguished cast.
  • Part of what enthralls about the original Lumiere footage, aside from its sterling pictorial quality, is the lost world it portrays. First at bat, Patrice Leconte does an amusing riff by refilming the Lumieres'”Train Coming into the Station at La Ciotat.” Of course, the train in question is now the high-speed TGV, which barrels through La Ciotat without stopping.
  • The subtext to Wim Wenders’ shot of Berlin, into which two of his “angels” wander, will be lost 100 years from now, but Zhang Yimou’s gorgeous and funny gag set on a scenic bend in the Great Wall of China will hold up as long as the film itself.
  • Spike Lee and Lasse Hallstrom choose to immortalize family members. Andrei Konchalovsky orchestrates a memento mori: In a desolate French gorge, the camera settles on a dead dog hosting a maggot convention.
  • Alain Corneau’s lovely entry captures the enchanting movements of a young woman dancer from India; Corneau later hand-tinted the footage with a range of dyes from old-style pastels to Day-Glo.
  • Helma Sanders puts 88-year-old master electrician Louis Cochet on a pedestal at Versailles, where he literally conducts light as an orchestra conductor would.
  • With the Brooklyn Bridge in the distance, Jerry Schatzberg nails a very New York-style encounter between a bag lady and a trash collector.
  • Youssef Chahine plants his ersatz Lumiere brothers in front of the pyramids only to have an early censor emerge from the dunes and wreak havoc. Abbas Kiarostami keenly limns the end of a romance using a close-up of a frying pan, a couple of eggs and a voice on an answering machine.
  • Hugh Hudson bravely goes hand-held (there’s no viewfinder) in Peace Park while President Truman’s voice announces that the bomb’s been dropped on Hiroshima. Kiju Yoshida brilliantly uses the same location to prove that there are some things that simply can’t be filmed.
  • “Indochine” helmer Regis Wargnier is heard to say, “After all, this isn’t Catherine Deneuve.” Soon after, we see a gentleman strolling toward us who turns out to be Francois Mitterand. In voiceover, the former French president reminisces about filmed images that affected him.
  • Claude Lelouch — who clearly loves directing — has finally made a Lelouch film that no one could possibly dislike. Merchant Ivory also pull off a particularly appealing visual coda, for which Richard Robbins composed a compact score.
  • A real movie set is put to splendidly eerie use by John Boorman in Dublin, where he shoots period extras and contemporary techies on the set of Neil Jordan’s “Michael Collins.”
  • Michael Haneke in Vienna had the inspired idea to grab 52 seconds from the TV news of March 19, 1995, 100 years to the day since the crank first turned on a Lumiere camera in Lyon.
  • Theo Angelopoulos is last in line, with a shot that perfectly mimics the mythical/biblical tableaux of yesteryear. Ulysses, washed ashore near Athens, asks himself (via title card), “On what foreign shore have I landed?” and then emerges from the water to hold the camera in his cool explorer’s gaze, which resonates as a pun on the title of helmer’s Cannes competition entry, “Ulysses Gaze.”