"Lisa Goldstein - Dark Rooms" - читать интересную книгу автора (Goldstein Lisa) DARK ROOMS
by Lisa Goldstein Lisa Goldstein offers us a poignant look at the magic of Georges Méliés, one of science fiction’s first filmmakers. The story was inspired by “a photograph of an elderly Méliés selling toys in a train station. As soon as I saw the image, I knew there was a story in it.” **** Nathan Stevens first saw Georges Méliés in 1896, in the basement of the Grand Café in Paris. There, in the Salon des Indiens, the Lumiére brothers had opened the first moving picture theatre, and Stevens watched, entranced, as a train arrived at a station, a man watered his garden, a blacksmith worked at his forge. The pictures ended and the lights came up. The glow from the gaslamps was not harsh, but he sat there blinking, dazzled, his eyes filled with motion, with smoke and waves and wind-blown leaves. For a moment he wondered that his surroundings remained the same, that the train did not roar through the small room, flattening chairs as it went, or the sea crash through the walls and drown them all. Near him people were picking up their purses and canes, putting on their coats, stepping over his legs as they headed for the door. Finally the One other man had not moved. He was balding, with a drooping mustache and a trim goatee. He was blinking as Stevens himself had done, as if he were just waking from a dream, or loosed from some enchantment. Then he smiled, perhaps at Stevens, perhaps at a lingering memory from the pictures they had seen together. It was a kind smile, Stevens thought; you might see an uncle smile just that way as he gave a present to his favorite niece. But there was something else in it too, something deeper and more serious, and Stevens thought the man might know more about these films, perhaps even know how they were made. The man stood. “One minute, please,” Stevens said. The other man turned, a polite expression on his face. Suddenly Stevens could think of nothing to say, though he had been in Paris for six months and his French was nearly fluent. “A—an amazing thing, isn’t it?” he said finally. “We will all be changed,” the man said, or Stevens thought he said. He put on his hat. “Wait,” Stevens said. “Do you know about these—these pictures? Do you know how it’s done?” |
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