Le squelette joyeux (1898) Poster

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7/10
Dem Bones
boblipton21 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A skeleton dances so joyously and frantically that he -- she? not being a forensic anatomist, I can't be sure -- comes apart and reassembles in this Lumiere trick film.

It's a pretty good trick film and I am not quite sure of how they managed this particular short subject. At first I thought it was a marionette, but when the skeleton falls to pieces and the individual bones start to dance, it seems unlikely -- it would require a team of puppeteers. Stop motion? It might be armature work given the black background, but given the motion that seems unlikely. So that uncertainty makes the film even more interesting.
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7/10
It looks more like a than Georges Méliès film than a Louis Lumière film
planktonrules10 September 2020
I found this film on YouTube when I was watching some Georges Méliès films. I can only assume someone looked at the style and assumed it was one of his pictures...which isn't at all surprising. What IS surprising is that it was made by one of the Lumière brothers...who were known for much more mundane sorts of pictures than "The Merry Skeleton".

In "The Merry Skeleton" an obviously fake skeleton dances about on a string. However, by stopping and restarting the camera, you see parts of the skeleton fall off and magically reattach themselves. A cute trick for its day...and mildly enjoyable today.
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Illusion of Death
Cineanalyst13 November 2020
A common misconception is that motion pictures give the illusion of life; to the contrary, its illusion is one of death. Indeed, André Bazin, in "The Ontology of the Photographic Image," theorized cinema as mummification, a practice of embalming the dead. In traditional live-action cinema, life and motion is captured, made dead and still series of photographs, before being reanimated and projected on a screen like some grotesque Frankenstein monster--or a dancing skeleton. Lumière wasn't the first to realize this, either. For centuries before the Cinématographe was invented, there was the screen practice of the magic lantern, or "the lantern of fear," as it was otherwise known. Perhaps, the first such lantern slide, as illustrated by Christiaan Huygens in 1659, was of a skeleton given the illusion of macabre movement (see Laurent Mannoni's "The Great Art of Light and Shadow: Archaeology of the Cinema"). Later, a band of sequential images was given the illusion of motion by rapid succession via intermittent movement in Beale's Choreutoscope; the most famous of these are six images of a dancing skeleton (reprinted in Brian Coe's "The History of Movie Photography" and elsewhere). There was also Robertson's Phantasmagoria, which employed back-projected lantern slides moving on tracks to frighten spectators with approaching skeletons and other jump scares. It's appropriate, then, too, that when Disney further or re-popularized hand-drawn animation that the studio's first "Silly Symphony" should've been "The Skeleton Dance" (1929).

As for this Lumière film of the supposedly "cheerful" or "merry" "Dancing Skeleton," its also been misattributed as an early example of stop-motion animation, although I think it's rather obvious that it's a marionette (and it's labeled as such in the Lumière catalogue (398, vue no. 831)) worked by an unseen operator, which aptly was also the case with the Cinématographe. It's also something of a puzzle as to why such puppetry is ever classified as animation like the hand-drawn or even stop-motion sort. It's live-action cinematography of an inanimate, dead object animated in real time for the view of the camera--not still drawings or images brought to life only during projection. In that sense, this is akin to the actualities that make up most of the Lumière catalogue and is what distinguishes this "Dancing Skeleton" from some magic lantern precedents or the Disney cartoon. Unlike those from Huygens, Beale, Robertson and Disney, this skeleton once "lived" and danced before the Lumière Cinématographe captured and killed it, only for it, long after everyone involved in making it has since died and for more than a century since it was made, turned into a cinematographic ghost, continually reanimated, broken apart and put back together again and made to dance.

P.S. There's a third mistake that's been made across our present-day internet landscape regarding this film. There seems to have been two "Dancing Skeleton" films made in 1897 or 1898 (the Lumière film is listed as being programmed for a 20 March 1898 screening, but may've been photographed, if not released, earlier), one by Lumière and the other by the American Mutoscope Company, which the AFI catalog gives a release date of November 1897. Besides it or the Lumière film being cannibalized for AM&B's multiple-exposure trick film, "Davy Jones' Locker" (1900), the American Mutoscope film seems to be lost despite what some YouTube or Letterboxd posts might otherwise imply.
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4/10
Interesting motive
Horst_In_Translation13 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The skeleton became increasingly popular as a motive depicted to entertain the masses. Disney made use of it on several occasions later on and here French silent film pioneer gives us quite a show of a skeleton dancing, doing slapstick and never ever losing its drive even after its bones aren't fit exactly the way together they're supposed to be. This is the kind of short film you need to watch with a nice fast and catchy tune to get the most out of it. I'm truly curious how people back then perceived this short movie. Were they really scared by the protagonist or did they enjoy its funny aspects as much as I did? Did they think of it as the basis of out body or more of a cartoon character. Well, there was with very very few exceptions (Louis Reynaud) no animation present at this point, so they may have been quite confused about what was going on, especially as the film genre was still very early, even if especially 1896 had been a truly prolific year for movies.
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Le Squelette Joyeux (1898)
Michael_Elliott27 January 2017
Le Squelette Joyeux (1898)

Long before Disney had THE SKELETON DANCE, there was this forty-second film from the Lumiere Brothers. Basically we see a skeleton (attached to wires) dancing around. As it dances faster and faster parts of it begin to fall off and then attach itself back to the body. This certainly isn't the work of Georges Melies but it's still pretty darn good and it's certainly very entertaining. It's obvious to see how the dance is being done but this really doesn't take away from the entertainment factor and especially when you consider when this was made. The goal was to make viewers laugh and I'm sure many did back in the day, although the sight of the skeleton might have scared some as well.
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10/10
Were all doing
catpantry10 February 2020
What were supposed to, or else! A woman sits by a swamp thinking about what had happened before. She saw a mini purple object with a soul on a treadmill staring at a pucture of the crossed out sun. She had been entranced, and took a nap right there. The sun rose and kind of bleached here mind so she built a room full of warm water (with 0 entrance) out of play dough and set it next to the purple object. The purple object slowly turned its attention to the room, and basically ended up not looking away from it while moving on its machine. And..the woman stared at that with a blank face.
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10/10
The funniest film of early films
diogohenrivintem31 March 2016
This short film is hilarious! It is just a skeleton dancing, but he's so clumsy that makes it funny. I actually laughed at this one, which is very rare in this early short films. This Auguste & Louis Lumière film is the most creative and best edited film of the early cinema. Sincerely, I don't know how this is not the most famous film of the Lumière Brothers. I also rated L'arrive dun train with 10 out of 10, but just because these re pieces of history. These are the great images of the dawn of cinema. It certainly shows us the importance of the brothers in cinema, them, LePrince, Edison, William Dickinson and others made one of the most beautiful things ever, the motion picture. I like to watch this early films, I believe every cinephile does and this is probably the funniest of them, I thing people should valorize these films more.
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10/10
Not stop motion animation!
galenfott6 June 2014
While this film is fascinating and delightful, it is absolutely not stop motion animation. It is a film of a "break apart" skeleton marionette, nothing more. I have a skeleton marionette made by the Pelham Puppets company that does all these tricks. Clearly the design for the marionette was around at the turn of the century, and Pelham mass-marketed it. I'm astonished that this film is widely regarded as "one of the first stop motion films", when it is nothing of the kind. That's all I have to say, but unfortunately the IMDb is insisting that my review isn't long enough, so I'm writing more words. The film itself is only 45 seconds long! How many words can one write about a 45 second film?
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10/10
Perfect
cantavlak8 November 2020
Among the simplest yet best movies ever, comedy and horror join in this flawless short. watch it now it won't cost you a minute nor a penny,since it's in the public domain. thank you ,lumiere brothers, thank you
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As about as fictitious as the Lumiere Brothers got
Tornado_Sam26 October 2017
Honestly, this short subject was indeed made by the Lumiere Bros! Go ahead and laugh but it's true. Auguste and Louis Lumiere's films were often slices of everyday activities that will today be mostly of interest to film historians. Sometimes the Bros DID, however, create shorts that were staged just a bit, such as the primitive comedy "Tables Turned on the Gardener". But "The Joyeus Skeleton" is the closest I've ever seen the Bros get to the kind of filmmaking Georges Melies was turning out at the exact same time, not a trick film but certainly far from a documentary. It features a skeleton marionette (never mind that crud about it being stop-motion animation) dancing and flinging his bones around so that he falls apart. It is quite a clever idea and is interesting for the development of the Bros' films, and amazingly enough it's actually one of the few Lumiere films that can still entertain today. (If you wanna see it, many YouTube uploads have a fun music track that sounds like clacking bones which makes the watch more fun).
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6/10
Funny bones.
Pjtaylor-96-1380442 December 2021
'The Merry Skeleton (1898)' depicts a happy skeleton busting some moves on the dance floor, unfazed whenever a bone falls out of place. The piece is pretty enjoyable for what it is, a silly little sideshow featuring a skeleton on a string and some camera tricks to make it seem as though it's putting itself back together after it falls apart. There isn't much to it, but it's pleasant enough and carries a lot of historical weight. I can imagine this delighting quite a few people, especially children, back in its day. 6/10.
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