Famous for inventing the cinematograph and the autochrome, Auguste and Louis Lumière are among the most significant figures in film and photography history.
With
their first Cinématographe show in the basement of the Grand Café in the
boulevard des Capucines in Paris on 28 December 1895, the Lumière brothers have
been regarded as the inventors of cinema—the
projection of moving photographic pictures on a screen for a paying audience.
However, they were probably not the first to do this: the Latham brothers in
New York were screening boxing films to paying audiences from 20 May 1895,
using their Eidoloscope projector.
Nevertheless,
the achievement of the Lumière brothers was considerable. Their Cinématographe
was the first satisfactory apparatus for taking and projecting films, and its
claw mechanism became the basis for most cine cameras.
THE LUMIÈRE BROTHERS’ BEGINNINGS
Auguste and Louis Lumière were born in Lyon, France, where their father, Antoine
Lumière, had a photographic business. At the age of 17, Louis invented a
highly sensitive photographic plate which the Lumière family began
manufacturing. It was so successful commercially that the Lumières built a
factory in the Monplaisir suburb of Lyon. By 1894, they were employing 300
people.Late that year, Antoine saw an example of Edison’s peepshow Kinetoscope in Paris and encouraged his sons to develop an apparatus that would take and project moving pictures. Within a few months, they produced a successful prototype of the Cinématographe, which was not only a camera but a printer and projector as well. It was patented in France on 13 February 1895.
THE CINÉMATOGRAPHE
Compared
with other attempts at producing a movie camera,
1.
the Cinématographe was remarkably
compact and, unlike the Edison Kinetograph, it did not rely on electrical
power, which few premises had at that time.
2.
The Cinématographe could be taken
anywhere, either to shoot film or to use as a projector—all that was required
was a magic lantern lamphouse with a gas or limelight illuminate.
At
the heart of the Cinématographe was the film transport mechanism, whereby two
pins or ‘claws’ were inserted into sprocket holes at each side of the film,
moved it down and were then retracted, leaving the film stationary for
exposure. This recurrent movement was
designed by Louis and based on the principle of the sewing machine mechanism.
MAKING EARLY FILMS
The
Lumière brothers’ first film was shot
outside their factory as the workers left at the end of the day. It was
shown to the Société d’Encouragement à l’Industrie Nationale in Paris on 22
March 1895: this was probably the first public screening of moving pictures
,the Lathams’ first public demonstration in New York took place on 21 April
1895.
At the Paris meeting, Louis met the engineer
Jules Carpentier, who undertook to refine and manufacture the
Cinématographe for the Lumières.
Later
that year, the Lumière brothers made a number of other films, all around a
minute long, showing scenes such as
Auguste and his wife feeding their
baby;
a train arriving at La Ciotât in the
south of France;
and possibly the first film comedy, L’arroseur arrosé, in which a
mischievous boy tricks a gardener into being soaked with water and is chased
and spanked.
Another public demonstration of the
Cinématographe was given to the French Photographic Congress held in Lyon in
June 1895, when the delegates were particularly impressed at seeing film of
themselves taken the previous day.
THE PUBLIC LAUNCH OF THE
CINÉMATOGRAPHE
Against
his sons’ wishes, Antoine Lumière decided to launch the Cinématographe publicly
in Paris on 28 December 1895. The screening was organised by Antoine and
Clément Maurice, with three members of the Lumière staff in charge of
projection. The Lumière brothers and Carpentier were not there. The first show
was given to an invited audience of journalists, theatre directors (including
Georges Méliès) and friends. Thereafter, the public shows commenced.
Each
show comprised ten films and lasted about 15 minutes. There were twenty shows a
day, starting at 10.00 and ending at 01.30 the next morning, with breaks at
12.00–14.00 and 19.00–20.00. Admission was one franc.
There
was little public interest at first—the few papers that reported on it
criticised the name ‘Cinématographe’—but news soon spread. On some days, queues
extended a quarter of a mile, and the takings amounted to 2,500 francs (more
than £42,000 in today’s money).
THE CINÉMATOGRAPHE IN
BRITAIN
The
first public screening of the Cinématographe in Britain took place at the
Malborough Hall of the Royal Polytechnic Institution in Regent Street, London
on 21 February 1896. There had been a press show the previous day when,
coincidentally, the British cinema pioneer Robert Paul had
demonstrated his Theatrograph projector at Finsbury Technical College
The
opening performance attracted only 54 customers but, as in Paris, the
Cinématographe’s popularity soon increased. Cinema quickly became part of music
hall programmes.
THE CINÉMATOGRAPHE GOES GLOBAL
In
the first years of the Lumière film operation, cameramen were sent all over the
world to record scenes in locations such as Russia, Japan and the Holy Land.
In
America, the first Cinématographe show took place at eith’s Union Square
Theater, New York on 29 June 1896.
In
November the Lumière brothers established their own agency in New York, selling
equipment and films. This was very successful for a few months, but the Lumière
brothers had fallen foul of the American customs by importing apparatus
and films illegally—their manager had to escape the country—but mainly
because films sprocketed in the Edison format were becoming the industry
standard.
The
Lumière brothers began to issue copies of films in both their original and the
Edison format, but the ubiquity of the latter signalled the obsolescence of the
original Cinématographes. Before the end of 1897, the Cinématographe had
largely been superseded by the Lumière Cinématographe Model B, a
projection-only machine designed for film with Edison perforations.
THE LUMIÈRE BROTHERS MOVE AWAY
FROM CINEMA
Auguste
and Louis continued to work on technical developments, and in 1900 devised a
camera which took large-format 75mm films. By 1905, however, the Lumière
brothers withdrew from the cinema business. They worked instead on inventing
the first successful photographic colour process—the Lumière Autochrome—in
1907. Louis also worked on a process of stereoscopic cinematography.
The
two brothers lived long enough to be famous as pioneers of the cinema within
their lifetimes.
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