Film Review
At the time it was made,
La Vie et
la passion de Jésus Christ (a.k.a.
The Life and the passion of Jesus Christ)
was the equivalent of one of today's multi-million dollar Hollywood
blockbusters. Running to five reels (44 minutes) in its final
form (arrived at after several years of tinkering), it was an
extraordinarily ambitious film for the studio that made it,
Pathé, and its worldwide success added greatly to the company's
prestige. Not only was the film longer than the vast majority of
films that were available at the time (few ran to more than one reel,
or ten minutes in duration), it was also partially coloured, using the
stencil colour process which Pathé had invented
(Pathéchrome). This involved the painstaking task of
hand-painting individual objects within a scene, frame-by-frame.
Today, the results are far from spectacular, but for someone watching
the film in 1905 this early experiment with colour must have appeared
wondrous.
The film was crafted by two of Pathé's star directors, Lucien
Nonguet and Ferdinand Zecca, an unlikely pairing as Nonguet's forte was
slapstick (he directed several Max Linder films) and Zecca was renowned
for his naturalistic dramas. Sacred art from the Middle Ages
onwards was presumably the strongest artistic influence on the
production, with scenes carefully constructed to resemble paintings
that would have been easily recognisable to the film's audience.
This explains why in almost every scene (each depicting an incident in
the life of Christ) the camera is static and the characters are
arranged in a theatrical fashion. On only a few occasions does
the camera move within a scene, with a modest tracking shot to another
part of the set, and edits within a scene are just as rare. It is
also to be noted that there is no dialogue - the only intertitles that
are used in the film are those which introduce each of the
scenes. This would have posed no problem at the time, as the
predominantly Christian audience would have been familiar with every
part of the story being told.
Despite its technical simplicity,
La
Vie et Passion du Jésus Christ is a polished and
enchanting example of early cinema. Whether you subscribe to
Christianity or not, the film has considerable charm and its effects,
whilst primitive by today's standard, are imaginatively used to instil
a sense of wonder in the spectator. The Transfiguration sequence
is remarkably effective, as is the one depicting Christ's ascension,
and it is surprising how the same effects which were used in other
films of this period for comic effect (the films of Georges
Méliès spring to mind) could also be used to inspire
awe. There have been numerous cinematic accounts of the life and
passion of Christ since, but for all their overblown grandeur few of
these are as satisfying as the one that those great pioneers at
Pathé came up with at the dawn of cinema.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The life and passion of Jesus Christ, presented as a series of tableaux
taken from the four gospels of the New Testament. Beginning with
the Annunciation, the film relates the story of Christ from his birth
in a stable in Bethlehem to his betrayal and execution, ending with his
resurrection and triumphant ascension into Heaven.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.