The One-Man Band (1900) Poster

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7/10
Another nice short film by the master...
jluis198420 April 2007
At the turn of the century, Georges Méliès' amazing shorts were the most famous motion pictures of the world, as his highly creative and technically innovative "Cinemagic" had proved that cinema was not only a quite useful device for scientific purposes, but also a very promising new way of entertainment. Méliès' most famous works are without a doubt the fantasy movies he made in the first decade of the 20th century, where he used all his special effects tricks to narrate stories of magic, horror and science fiction as the first director of fiction movies in history (1902's "Le Voyage Dans la lune" is an icon of cinema history). However, his earlier films, a collection of shorts where a magician makes impossible tricks, are as amazing as his stories, as it was in those early shorts where he polished his technique and singlehandedly invented the art of special effects.

1900's short film "L' Homme Orchestre" (Known in English as "The One-Man Band") is one of those movies that would set the basis for what would become his trademark "Cinemagic" in the years to come. In this short film, the magician (as usual, played by Méliès himself) prepares for his next trick by putting seven chairs for the members of his band even when there is no sign of anyone else in the place. Suddenly, the magician sits in one of the chairs, and after he rises, a cymbal player appears sit on the chair the magician used to be. The magician moves to the next chair and repeats the trick, appearing another band member in the process, and he continues doing the same until the six chairs are occupied by a member of his orchestra. The magician has successfully replicated himself six times in order to play a song like truly a "One-Man Band".

True to his theatrical style and his training as a magician, in "L' Homme Orchestre" director Georges Méliès conceived a charming and very funny way to show off a camera trick he had discovered a few years before and was truly mastering by this stage: multiple exposures. Mixing this quite interesting property of film with his great skill at editing, Georges Méliès crafted an effect that flows seamlessly and in a very fluid way. However, the movie is more than a camera trick, as the funny way that Méliès uses to set his film (making good use of pantomime) enhances the atmosphere and overall makes for a better experience. While Méliès made the multiple exposures trick very popular, and soon most of the early pioneers began to use it in their films too, it was his care for the building of the story what made his films feel different, more like a complete show and less like a mere "gimmick film".

By 1900, Méliès' films had already started to be studied and imitated by many other pioneers, who followed the path traced by the "Cinemagician" in the discovery and development of the mysteries of the new art. While people like Edwin S. Porter and Ferdinand Zecca had quickly mastered the tricks that Méliès discovered (even imitating his style and plots), Méliès' were still superior in both technical achievement and artistic conception. In the following years Méliès would continue the development of this and many other effects, and his efforts would be crowned with the release of his fantasy films, where he exploited his tools to bring fairy tales to screen. "L' Homme Orchestre" is probably not one of Méliès' best known films, but it's historical importance and beautiful craftsmanship makes it a joy to watch even today, more than 100 years after its release. 7/10
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8/10
Breathtaking editing for 1900
SolarionFI4 March 2020
To imagine this film is over 100 years old is already quite a bit take in, but then you realize even now you don't know how he does his magic without looking it up somewhere. Méliès was truly one of the greatest artists in the history of cinema and we owe him a great big deal for what we have today.
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7/10
The Méliès symphony
ackstasis13 June 2007
One of the visual effects that French "Cinemagician" Georges Méliès pioneered and mastered was the double exposure, in which a piece of film is exposed twice, to two different images. The resulting photographic image shows the second image superimposed over the first. 'L' Homme orchestre' is, for its time, a rather advanced experiment into his effect, and, rather than just two images captured together, Méliès has created seven clones of himself, each posing as the various members of an orchestra. As the first magician/musician eases himself onto the first chair, another semi-transparent double rises from his body to occupy the second chair, and so forth.

After the enthusiastic "one-man band" has performed a musical piece, they sequentially dissolve into one another, leaving only the conductor of the orchestra, who hangs around for one final display of magic. As a large fan emerges behind him (apparently to his complete surprise, as Méliès demonstrates one of those classic silent comedy double-takes), the conductor takes a seat on the single remaining chair, which sinks into the floor. Quick as a flash, a semi-transparent Méliès comes hurtling from behind the fan, disappearing on impact with the floor with one of those whiz-bang puffs of smoke that the director so adored. The huge fan lowers again to reveal a smugly-grinning Méliès standing there, safe and well.

More than a century after it was produced, 'L' Homme orchestre,' though not popularly known among most people, is notable in its innovative use of a newly-discovered visual effect, and as a brief demonstration of Georges Méliès' boundless creativity and enthusiasm. If you've got a couple of minutes of spare time, why not occupy yourself by watching this enjoyable little film?
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An Early Touch of Wizardry & Wit From Méliès
Snow Leopard13 September 2005
This is one of the earlier displays of the wit and camera wizardry of movie pioneer Georges Méliès. The idea is a simple one, but by no means an easy one to carry off using the resources of the time. Méliès also adds a few interesting details to the high-quality camera tricks.

The same idea was used later on by other silent screen comedians, most notably by Buster Keaton in his wonderful feature, "The Playhouse". This much earlier movie is quite a bit simpler, but considering its era it is almost as impressive. Méliès plays a band-leader and each member of the band, using multiple exposures and other carefully crafted special effects to create an amusing scene.

As Méliès gained even more experience, his features often added lavishly detailed settings to the fine visual effects. This 1900 movie relies mostly on the central idea, without too much background detail, but his technique is already excellent, and this is one of many entertaining Méliès features that demonstrate his considerable creativity and skill.
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7/10
That's Me All Over
Hitchcoc10 November 2017
There are seven chairs lined up on stage. A man (Melies) fills on, and then reproduces himself and fills the next, and so on. Each of the incarnations has a musical instrument. First they play in a conventional way, but eventually they will merge and become one man again. There is some clever reshuffling on the stage. One of the better ones.
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6/10
The Magnificent Seven
wes-connors22 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
French magician and filmmaker Georges Melies has seven chairs lined up across your movie screen. He appears dressed as a musician and takes a seat, then a super-imposed Mr. Melies rises, with cymbals, from the first sitting Melies and sits in the second seat. From the second seat, a drumming Melies moves on to the next seat. This goes on until all seven seats are filled with different members of an instrumental orchestra. Melies plays each part. They perform enthusiastically for the audience and meld back into the original Melies. He is a one man band!

****** L'homme orchestre (1900) Georges Melies ~ Georges Melies
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7/10
Melies Continues Development Of Trick Photography
CitizenCaine23 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In The One-Man Band, Georges Melies uses multiple exposure photography to show himself as several band members playing different instruments in unison. Melies also continues to use jump-cut editing to make objects appear and disappear (the chairs in this case) and advance the action. The work it must have taken Melies to synchronize the footage must have been extraordinary. Just as Melies makes the likenesses of himself as band members appear, he makes them disappear also echoing the many other previous films he's done with creating a scenario and then dismantling it in the context of a sole creator/creative force. *** of 4 stars.
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9/10
For 1900, great stuff
planktonrules2 September 2006
Director Méliès later went on to make several other shorts where he acted and replicated himself (in two cases, popping off his head and using it to make a whole bunch of singing heads), but I think this is one of the earliest of this type of film (the first coming in 1898). But, instead of pulling off his head, he is able replicate himself many times until he is an entire performing ensemble. While compared to later trick cinematography this isn't a great special effect, for its day it was amazing and quite funny. For a similar type experience (though of course a lot better because of advancements in camera-work), see Buster Keaton's THE PERFORMANCE--where he not only plays all the performers, but all the members of the audience (including the women)!

If you want to see this film online, go to Google and type in "Méliès" and then click the video button for a long list of his films that are viewable without special software.
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6/10
It's good.
ofpsmith26 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This is the shortest film I've reviewed. It's also the second one I've reviewed that was directed by Georges Melies. It's very interesting seeing as how Melies makes clones of himself and considers that the band. I would have given it 7 stars but I gave it 6 because It's a silent film. Now don't get me wrong I still love silent films but I wouldn't be focusing on this silent film aspect if the movies title didn't have the word band in it. You know there is a band, and that it's simply a bunch of clones. But we can't even hear what it's playing. It does however manage to be pretty interesting. Overall it's fairly good. But it's got flaws.
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10/10
The variegated unit of musical cosciousness
luigicavaliere16 February 2019
A man splits into seven himself, they are all musicians and the first directs all the others. A metaphor on the musician that divides the attention in more points in the variegated unit of the musical cosciousness.
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7/10
Sweet Effects
MisterSisterFister3 November 2018
This has some pretty cool special effects for the time period. I liked it, hence a 7. You monkeys.
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10/10
An amazing little short
Chrissie11 April 2010
Warning: Spoilers
It's hard to believe that this masterpiece of special effects was filmed in 1900. Georges Melies clones himself six times, transforming into a conductor and six members of an orchestra. The seven of him perform together, then coalesce into the one.

At the time, all special effects work had to be done in the camera by use of shutters, back- cranking, and re-cranking. Melies had to carefully coordinate his actions, timing them perfectly, or the entire shot would be ruined. Kudos are due as well to the cameraman, who had to be metronome-steady in order to make the effect work.

Surely this little film served as inspiration for Buster Keaton's "The Playhouse".
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6/10
Georges Méliès is a one man band
Red-Barracuda26 March 2012
In this innovative short Georges Méliès - the man who invented cinematic special effects - plays an entire band. The specific technology that Méliès showcases here is multiple exposures. This technique was used to populate a single scene with a number of separate images, filmed independently. In this case Méliès appears as seven different characters, all making up the little orchestra. It's a typically ambitious idea from the master showman of early cinema. And like his other experiments, it's done very well. It really is remarkable how successfully Méliès produced his crazy ideas at this extremely early stage in the development of the medium. Not only is it technically expert but Méliès also acts out seven characters in one simultaneous scene and his timing is very precise. This film was one of many from the director's first phase where his movies were essentially showcases for his visual trickery and cinematic sleight of hand. He would soon go on to expand his repertoire with story-telling, such as the seminal A Trip to the Moon. But these earlier experiments are still a great way of seeing the development of a true pioneer.
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5/10
Inventive Melies.
Ben_Cheshire27 March 2004
Georges Melies was the founder of special effects in movies. Its really quite wonderful watching these little shorts: imagine you had the opportunity to realise for the first time the things that were possible with filmed images. By filming a scene, then removing or moving one element and filming it again and editing the two shots together you can make things disappear or jump from one side of the room to the other. This is true magic, and watching Melies discover these things is a special thing i'm glad i've had the opportunity to see.

Aside from this value, the shorts still retain their immense fun for audiences an entire century after their creation. Now THAT is called staying power.

In this short, Melies clones himself six times to fill six seats of an orchestra, then makes the seats disappear, then reappear, then makes himself disappear in a cloud of smoke. The music, i believe is Robert Israel, a great modern composer who's been doing us the honour of writing scores for many great silent movies, which adds immeasurably to our enjoyment of them.
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the best of Mélies
ufocska10 May 2003
In this short film Georges Mélies makes the first use of double-exposing, making seven "clones" of Himself playing an orchestra. The trick is now easy to do, but then it was quite expensive to film seven different shots to one roll of film. Although Mélies makes a professional and well-coordinated work.
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7/10
Thus, Multiplicity was Born
view_and_review6 September 2022
I'm sure there has been at least one time in our lives when we wanted to replicate ourselves. Just this weekend I needed to wash my car, get gas, go to the store, and do laundry. I did two of the four things. It was too damn hot! If I could've replicated myself, I could've gotten all four things done with minimal effort.

In "The One Man Orchestra" Georges Meilies does replicate himself to become a seven piece orchestra. You know what they say, "If you want things done right, then do them yourself." Georges, with the help of some camera tricks, made it seem like he filled seven seats and then reconsolidated back to one individual.

To create the illusion of seven identical musicians, the film required seven simultaneous multiple exposures; only one other known Méliès film, The Melomaniac, uses so many exposures at once.
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8/10
How do these things work?! WHARRGARBL!!!
rtivey91321 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
George Melies does it again! In this film, he is presenting an orchestra - - of himself! He sits in a chair and a clone of him with an instrument is there. He repeats this trick a few more times, and they all play a song. After they do that, they all merge back together. Melies takes a bow. This film shows they can take it beyond the limits in very early cinematography. This early flick shows the possibilities that cinema can hold, and if I was watching the premiere of this picture, I would've been astonished. If this movie was newer, I probably would rate it lower, but since it's from 1900, I'll be happy to give this movie an eight out of ten.
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8/10
Well Done
Rainey-Dawn12 July 2019
Well done film - George Melies creates seven copies of himself and each play a different instrument before he pulls himself back together into one man. This would be simple to do today but in 1900 this would have been expensive and time consuming to create.

8/10
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4/10
Méliès makes music.
Horst_In_Translation12 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
You could maybe call this short film, which runs for slightly over a minute, the "One Man Band" of the very early 20th century. Or was it really a one man band? Difficult to say, after all there were several members, but always the same person. In any case, this black-and-white film is probably hurt the most because it is a silent film and imagining music is almost impossible. Still, it's not a complete failure and some of famous film pioneer Georges Méliès (in his late 30s here) effects were nicely done. Pay attention to the chairs constantly moving and not only look at the master. However, he made better films around that time already in my opinion. Not recommended.
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Tricky
Cineanalyst16 September 2009
"The One-Man Band" is one of early cinema pioneer Georges Méliès's more amusing and ingenious trick film attractions. It exploits multiple-exposure photography (a.k.a. superimpositions), which he had already employed in some of his earlier trick films, including "The Four Troublesome Heads" (1898) and "The Mysterious Portrait" (1899). There is also some substitution splicing (a.k.a. stop substitutions), which was Méliès's most common trick. In this film, he uses multiple-exposure photography to reproduce his own image sevenfold—to create a band, who then play their various instruments in an amusingly hammy manner. To accomplish this feat took precise acting and direction from Méliès, as well as from his cameraman; camera masks were used and exact timing was required for the seven different exposures of the negative. It was all done in-camera. As indication of the sophistication of Méliès's trick here, Buster Keaton has received praise for technical and creative brilliance by doing the same thing 21 years later in "The Playhouse".
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4/10
Ok
injury-6544721 May 2020
It's an idea with potential but the execution is lacking It's just a bunch of guys, well the same guy, doing random stuff without any cohesion to the narrative
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The One Man Band
Michael_Elliott26 February 2008
One-Man Band, The (1900)

*** (out of 4)

aka L'Homme orchestre

This here is one of director Melies best known and loved films. Melies plays a band leader and we see his spirits or doubles, come to life and make for an entire band. Buster Keaton would somewhat redo this film two decades later in The Play House and in my opinion it can't hold a candle to this film. The special effects hold up quite well and the way the spirits come to be is nicely done. Melies was certainly a genius and this is one of the highlights of his career.
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