Animated
films are big business today. They dominate Family audience releases on the big screen which now sees dozens
of films released each year from major American
production companies and others from around
the world. These days most are
either computer generated or stop action clay modeling. Many are in 3-D. Only a relative handful are animated by hand in the laborious process of shooting individual cells. That process still dominates television cartoons
from prime time network and cable
shows like The Simpsons and Family Guy and kiddie fare on popular basic
cable networks and dwindling network
Saturday morning blocks.
Émile Cohl about the time he made Fantasmagorie
He had been inspired
in his work by a form of popular
street puppetry, Guignol which employed marionettes and Fantoche
in which a puppeteer stuck his head through a Curtin a
manipulated small puppet bodies
underneath. Both forms often were used to make political statements,
which became tolerated again after
the repressions of the Communards.
Cohl was a close associate
and follower of André Gill, the leading characterist in
Paris in the last decades of the 19th
Century.
Cohl had become deeply
involved with a now nearly forgotten
artistic movement, Les Arts
Incohérents—the Incoherents. Founded
by Jules Lévy in 1881, the movement featured work that was “irrational” and
absurd. Although it petered out by the mid 1890’s, Cohl was a major figure in it and contributed staged photographs the presaged much later work by the Surrealists.
A magazine cartoon by Cohl. |
Sometime after the turn of the Century, Cohl became
intersected in the new art form of film. He struck on the idea of making his cartoons move.
There had been crude animation
before—flip books were recorded on film
and the very first movie with a plot,
A Trip to the Moon,
made in 1902 by Georges Méliès contained
some stop-action animation.
Cohl hit on a new way
of making his drawings move. He
began in late February or early March of 1908.
He made scores of simple line
drawings. Laying them on a glass plate over a light source he traced those making incremental changes. He shot
photos of all of the resulting drawing twice. There were over 700 individual images put together they made a film almost 2 minutes long.
Although the drawings were charcoal on white paper, Cohl used the negatives, giving the effect
of chalk drawings on black paper.
This mirrored popular Magic Lantern shows of earlier
decades—the fantasmograph, which projected ghostly images that floated
across the walls.
The resulting film Fantasmagorie was released on August
17, 1908. It took French audiences by storm.
It began with shots of an
artist’s hand creating the simple characters, a clown and a gentleman. These figures morphed and changed in all sorts of fantastic ways.
Cohl continued to make short animated films for the Gaumont studios and later Pathé and
other studios before coming to the
United States in 1912. His films became more elaborate, but his surreal themes and style remained constant.
In America Cohl
quickly found work in the early film industry center at Ft. Lee, Virginia. He contributed to travelogues and
developed a series of animated shorts The
Newlyweds based on a popular newspaper strip. This series was so successful that it set off
the stampede to animate popular print comics.
In this way Cohl can be said to be the founder of American, as well as European animation.
Cohl returned to France with the
outbreak of World War I. Most of his American films were lost when his main American studio, a branch of the French studio Éclair burned
down shortly after he left for
Paris. Other films were destroyed when
most of the Ft. Lee studios moved to
Arizona to take advantage of regular
bright sunlight. Only a couple of
his American films survive.
The war in Europe
disrupted Cohl’s production. The few films he did make were put on the shelf and not released until it was over.
Cohl drawing in his later years. |
After the war Cohl made only one more significant film, La
Maison du fantoche in 1920.
After that animation became too
expensive to produce compared to live action films. And the public
taste was running to comedies
like those by American stars Charles Chaplain and Ben Turpin. Cohl was forced into retirement. He died
largely forgotten and in obscurity
in 1938. Just as an American named Walt Disney was elevating hand drawn animation to new heights.
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