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The Woes of Roller Skaters

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Directed by
  
Georges Méliès

Country
  
France

Initial release
  
1908

Production company
  
Star Film Company


Production company
  
Star Film Company

Language
  
Silent

Director
  
Georges Méliès

Release date
  
July 1908 (1908-07) (USA)

Similar
  
The One‑Man Band, The Voyage of the Bourri, The Man with the Rubber H, The Haunted Castle, Bluebeard

The Woes of Roller Skaters, also known as The Woes of Roller Skates, is a 1908 French short silent comedy film directed by Georges Méliès.

Contents

Production

The Woes of Roller Skaters was apparently inspired by a 1905 or 1906 film by Pathé Frères, featuring a character very similar to the exaggeratedly obese man in this film. Méliès appears in the film as the passerby attacked by "Apaches" at the end. The actor Bruneval plays the commissioner of police, with Méliès's set painter Claudel as one of the police officers. Fernande Albany plays one of the ladies.

Themes

The film is one of several Méliès works in which spectators watching movement begin unintentionally to imitate it: in this case, a cancan and then a roller skating act. Like Méliès's 1905 comedy The Scheming Gambler's Paradise, the film parodies the police by showing them making their own comical use of confiscated objects.

Release

The film was released by Méliès's Star Film Company, and is numbered 1227–1232 in its American catalogues. (There was no known French release of the film.) It was registered for American copyright at the Library of Congress on 21 July 1908.

References

The Woes of Roller Skaters Wikipedia