Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Between Calais and Dover

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Directed by
  
Georges Méliès

Running time
  
Short

Language
  
Silent film

Director
  
Georges Méliès

Production company
  
Star Film Company

Release date
  
1897

Country
  
France

Initial release
  
1897

Screenplay
  
Georges Méliès

Producer
  
Georges Méliès

Similar
  
The Misfortunes of an Expl, Divers at Work on the Wreck, A Mysterious Portrait, The Doctor and the Monkey, The Surrender of Tourna

Between Dover and Calais (French: Entre Calais et Douvres), also known as Between Calais and Dover, is an 1897 short silent film directed by Georges Méliès.

It was released by Méliès's Star Film Company and is numbered 112 in its catalogues, where it was advertised as a scène comique à bord d'un paquebot.

The film was filmed outside in the garden of Méliès's property in Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis, with painted scenery. The rolling motion of the ship was created by a special articulated platform, built by Méliès for Sea Fighting in Greece the same year. The set of the film includes a trademark with the initials "M.R.," referring to Méliès and Lucien Reulos, a colleague who was then Méliès's business partner.

The film features Méliès himself as the man in the checked suit; Georgette Méliès, his daughter, as the little girl with the doll; and Joseph Grapinet, a sculptor from Montreuil, as the man with binoculars.

112 between calais and dover 1897


References

Between Calais and Dover Wikipedia