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  • This movie may be the most elaborate variation on the sort of film that Georges Melies made famous: his TRIP TO THE MOON. Segundo De Chomon pulls out all the stops with dozens of cuts, iris shots, drawn scenery, cycloramas, stop motion, acrobats, fireworks.... you name it, it's there.

    It was all about to be swept away. Melies had borrowed from every previous method of shows, from stage and magicians and magic lanterns. He had added in more tricks made possible by a motion picture camera. It was all going under in its elaboration. It had grown too unwieldy as a story-telling technique and it would all be replaced by something just as complicated but much more subtle: modern film grammar. It would use every one of these techniques to a greater or lesser extent. It would, however, look entirely different.
  • A king, accompanied by his fool, interrupts a bearded scholar's reverie and insists that he be allowed to use the telescope, through which he observes the mugging face of the Man-in-the-Moon. Impressed, the king asks to see more wonders and the old professor brings forth an immense book that, when opened, shows moving images of the planets, apparently connected by a ladder. The two men then adjourn to an outdoor balcony where the king continues to observe the heavens through a hand-held telescope. He again looks at the Man-in-the-Moon (this time a painting with moving eyes) as well as lunar volcanoes, a woman sitting on a crescent moon, and the Gods Saturn and Jupitar on their respective planets (similar to the images seen earlier in the magical book). The king then retires only to 'awaken in a dream' and find the base of the ladder seen in the scholar's tome hanging near his bed. He ascends this with some difficulty and encounters the various heavenly denizens that he had seen in the book. He leaps from the ladder towards Jupiter and flies to the planet, arriving in a strange landscape where he is promptly accosted by acrobatic soldiers. Captured, he is taken to Jupiter's throne room, where the god torments him with a fiery thunderbolt before hurling him back to the celestial ladder. As the king descends, Saturn mischievously cuts the ladder with a pair of giant scissors and the king falls, only to awaken in is his bed. The nightmare over, the terrified king turns on the old professor for starting it all. This whimsical early 'voyage extraordinaire' owes a lot to Georges Méliès' films, for example, the Jovian soldiers that the King fights cavort and disappear in a puff of smoke when struck, exactly as did the Selenites in 'Voyage to the Moon' (1902). The special effects are clever if not always 'convincing': the celestial ladder the king 'climbs' is obviously laying horizontally on a stage with the crawling actor filmed from above (the king sets his feet between the rungs at times as he climbs). There are some nice moving sets, optical-transitions (such as when the King's bed moves from his room to the clouds), double exposures (the King flying to and from Jupiter), and the matte shot of the magical book is well executed (de Chomón uses similar trick to bring a blackboard to life in 'Excursion dans la lune', his 1908 knock-off of Méliès' iconic lunar adventure). The tinted version available on-line is in good condition with some nice colours, especially the pyrotechnic scenes (the volcanoes and Jupiter's lightning bolts) and there seem to be variety of musical options. By 1909, there had been numerous fanciful space adventures involving wizards and dreams, and while de Chomón's film is well-made and entertaining for its era, it is neither particularly novel nor innovative (visually or technically).
  • Segundo de Chomón was a French filmmaker who made a lot of short films which were either direct copies of his competitor's work (Georges Méliès) or were inspired by his films. Here in "The Voyage to Jupiter" Segundo uses Méliès' "Voyage to the Moon" and makes it his own. Instead of flying to the moon in a capsule launched by an enormous gun, Segundo's hero (a king?) has a dream about space and climbs a huge ladder to the planets! There, he eventually arrives on Jupiter and the locals are much like Méliès had on the moon...with their very explosive personalities. But more importantly, the film, while similar, is different enough that it still is Segundo's work...mostly. And darned clever work in this case...with very elaborate sets and costumes. My only regret is that the hand painted cels have lost their luster over time and the film could use some TLC.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Segundo de Chomón really outdoes himself in this later fantasy effort for Pathé. After hearing the title, you'd probably be thinking, "uh-oh, there goes Chomón again, ripping off Méliès's "A Trip to the Moon." Indeed, only a year before this, the brilliant Spanish filmmaker had succeeded in making (pretty much) an exact copy of "A Trip to the Moon" which, to Méliès fans, is simply an outrage. "A Trip to Jupiter" is something entirely different and even more innovative.

    The story, while simple, sets up some very interesting effects. It follows a king who is greatly intrigued by the visions his royal astronomer shows him of the heavens (one of them being this lifelike moon face, probably inspired by the moon face in "A Trip to the Moon", which makes weird faces). Going to bed a moment later, the king begins dreaming he can climb a ladder into space and talk to the stars and planets! He jumps onto Jupiter, is captured by aliens (similar to what happens in "A Trip to the Moon") and meets their leader. The rest is history.

    While the films's color makes it look good, the effects are simply marvelous. One of the sequences near the beginning where the astronomer opens a large book and shows the king a view of the rope ladder going into space, I found amazing because I actually couldn't figure out how they did it. There was also a brief, though pointless, use of pixelation on Jupiter in which the king ran around like a maniac at inhuman speed (for whatever reason). More important though, these effects tell a story!

    Fans of Méliès's "A Trip to the Moon" will want to see this. Chomón's work needs to become more well-known.