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Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa

Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa (English: A celebrated specialist pulling teeth at the grand Hotel Europa) was the first Venezuelan film. It was screened at the Baralt Theatre in Maracaibo, Zulia on 28 January 1897 as the second in a film block of four;[note 1] the block also featured another film from Maracaibo (Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo: English: Children bathing at the lagoon of Maracaibo). Little is known about the film's production, and scholars are uncertain of the identity of its director.

Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa
Frame from the film
Directed byUnknown; possibly Manuel Trujillo Durán or Gabriel Veyre
Release date
28 January 1897
CountryVenezuela

No complete copies of the original film survive. During the 2010s, a reconstruction of the film was produced in Venezuela with preserved photographs from the original. In the film, a dental surgeon at the Hotel Europa in Maracaibo pulls a man's teeth. Although the subject matter could make it an early horror film, scholars agree that the film was an actuality film.

A contemporary reviewer criticized the screening for its inappropriate projection speed and theatre lighting, but gave praise to the film.

Film content

As suggested by its title, the film depicts a "celebrated" surgeon pulling a patient's teeth at the Hotel Europa in Maracaibo. The story was described by the film historian Ana López as "a somewhat precarious dental extraction".[1] Jesús Ricardo Azuaga García described the film as being stylistically similar to Lumière films (possibly emulating them), saying that it illustrates "one of those more or less everyday activities that the French film pioneers used to show in their films".[2] Azuaga García notes that this was to be unusual for early Venezuelan film, and cites only three examples.[3][note 2]

Although no copies of the film were preserved, the Venezuelan Association of Film Exhibitors produced a part-reconstruction of Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa (English: A celebrated specialist pulling teeth at the grand Hotel Europa) and Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo (English: Children bathing in the lagoon of Maracaibo) in January 2017 for the 120th anniversary of their premieres. The Association collected frames from the 1890s which had been stored in the Zulia Photographic Archive, restoring and adding color to the images to recreate the approximate look of the films. Abdel Güerere wrote and produced the restoration, which was directed by Emiliano Faría.[4][5] A 1991 DVD history of Venezuelan cinema referred to the film; the DVD included an image of the extraction and one of the Hotel Europa.[6][note 3]

The identity of the dentist featured in the film is not known. The Diccionario General de Zulia identifies Vicente Toledo as the only well-known dentist in late 19th century Venezuela.[7] The 1897 Commercial Directory of American Republics cites two registered dentists in Maracaibo: Elias A. Capriles and Gaspar Elias González.[8] González was the inaugural president of the Fraternidad Odontológica del Zulia (English: Zulian Organization of Dentistry) in 1916.[7] The Hotel Europa, which features in the film, was sold and remodeled as the Hotel Zulia in 1913;[9] it was ultimately demolished in 1956, and the site used to build the Maracaibo Municipal Council building.[10]

Screening

 
Newspaper clipping announcing the showing of the films[note 4]

The film screening of Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa took place on 28 January 1897 at 7:00 pm[11] at the Teatro Baralt in Maracaibo,[12] where the first films shown in the country (imported American short films) had been screened.[13] Another Venezuelan film, Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo, was also shown; this film depicted people bathing at Lake Maracaibo and views of the city.[14] Two French films made by the Lumière brothers were also screened. One of these, shown last of the four, was the famous L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat. According to film historian Peter Rist, these films were projected on this occasion by Gabriel Veyre, a film director and projectionist for the Lumière company.[15] Rodolfo Izaguirre has suggested that in addition to the Venezuelan and French films, American films by Thomas Edison were shown as well.[16] The films were screened after a performance of Gaetano Donizetti's opera, La favorita.[17][18]

A contemporary review in El Cronista noted that the films seemed to have been made well, but their screening was poorly executed. The reviewer noted that the projection speed of the films was initially irregular and the theatre lighting was too bright for films.[19][note 5]

Production and director

 
A portrait of Manuel Trujillo Durán at the time.

The director of the film is unknown; scholars and researchers have suggested that the most likely people to be the director would be Manuel Trujillo Durán, a photographer from Maracaibo, or Veyre, the French traveling filmmaker. Film scholar, lecturer and Trujillo biographer Alexis Fernández[20] discussed the production of the first films in a 2013 television interview, agreeing that there is no tangible evidence indicating who the director was.[21]

For many years, film scholarship believed Trujillo had brought the Vitascope to Venezuela.[22] Sources have also suggested that Trujillo, with or without his brother Guillermo,[note 6] made the early films.[23][24][25] Though it was determined that Trujillo did not introduce the Vitascope,[note 7] the associated belief that he made the first films has persisted in some parts of Venezuela.[22] By 2018, it was generally accepted in local and national Venezuelan media that Trujillo did not make the film.[26]

The likelihood of Trujillo being the director has been a subject of debate among Venezuelan film scholars. Those who dispute it refer to evidence that shows Trujillo probably did not have a camera with the capability to make films, and the fact that he was in Táchira at the time of the screening.[27] On the other side, proponents of Trujillo as director note his proximity to the introduction of Venezuelan film and his relationship with American camera companies.[28] Veteran Venezuelan film critic Rodolfo Izaguirre says that the films are "presumed" to be made by him,[16] and Venezuelan film histories that support Trujillo note that "it is said" he was the director.[28] Outside of analysis, an article in the newspaper Últimas Noticias about National Film Day events in January 2019 celebrated Trujillo for making and projecting the film himself and outfitting the Baralt Theatre so the films could be shown.[29]

Proposing another director in 2018, Jesús Ángel Semprún Parra and Luis Guillermo Hernández wrote that the French camera operator and filmmaker Veyre was more likely to have made the film. They come to this view by noting that, while Trujillo left Maracaibo en route to Colombia in early January 1897, Veyre and his associate C. F. Bernard arrived in Venezuela in January 1897 as part of their filmmaking tour of Latin America and the Caribbean.[30] In a 2014 profile of Veyre, Venezuelan film professor Arturo Serrano wrote that he made no films in Venezuela.[31]

Modern critical views

Ana López suggests that Un célebre especialista... may be not only the first Venezuelan film, but may also contain "the earliest views shot in Latin America",[1] though Evangelina Soltero Sánchez suggests earlier dates for films produced elsewhere in South America.[32]

López writes that the subject of dental surgery, similar to "a few" other early Latin American films, created "a veneer of scientific objectivity [that] perfectly rationalized its more thrilling appeals" and gave a contemporary audience justification for watching a film when they were otherwise considered spectacles. However, López notes that the prevailing scholarly narrative that many Latin American films had science-related themes is inaccurate; she cites four films related to science, only one of which was produced after 1900. She suggests that films produced in Latin America were influenced by the upcoming 1900 Paris Exposition, where they might be shown.[33]

In his book, Latin American Cinema: A Comparative History, Paul A. Schroeder Rodríguez describes early Latin American films as generally reflective of "the air of self-sufficiency of the early pioneers, as if they were looking at themselves and liked what they saw" and cited Un célebre especialista... as an example that "speak[s] for [itself]".[24] Stephen M. Hart provides an insight into the cool welcome given the film in his book, saying that whilst it fit the mold of the actualité – a short film demonstrating actual events – audiences were quickly numbed by seeing many of these in succession and began "craving more interesting material than [...] a dentist's antics".[34]

Michelle Leigh Farrell discusses 20th-century Venezuelan cinema in her 2011 paper, noting its lack of presence and marginal influence in South America despite Venezuela having produced some of the first Latin American films. Farrell believes that this early success influenced the Venezuelan government to capitalize on the early films, monopolizing the industry with poorly-managed production companies which made newsreels and films supporting the government.[35] Michael Chanan suggests that although Venezuela was typical of Latin American nations (many of which did not continue their early production of entertainment films), there may be a rich trove of hidden independent films – such as the works of Edgar J. Anzola – which have been missing for decades.[36]

Elisa Martínez de Badra compares the film to its few predecessors, writing that the Edison films shown in Maracaibo in 1896 were "theatrical spectacle" but Un célebre especialista... was not; she describes it as "new media". Martínez adds that the form of Un célebre especialista... and Muchachos bañándose... is one of two factors that contributed to the development of a narrative approach in Venezuelan cinema.[note 8][37]

Examining The House at the End of Time as the first Venezuelan horror film, Robert Gómez suggests that Un célebre especialista... may actually hold this position: "It's not for no reason that the figure of the dentist exists in lots of B-movies and art films as the character that uses his office to torture victims. Think Marathon Man." Gómez adds that although the unknown director was not making a genre film, "one can not ignore the reaction of the spectator, who probably saw in it, as is natural, a terrifying story in the same way that many spectators reacted to L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat by the Lumière brothers".[38]

Notes

  1. ^ The first film in the block was the French Les Champs-Élysées.
  2. ^ The first of these three is Un célebre especialista.... The other two are La salida de la Misa de San Francisco, an 1899 film by Filippi Domini and Giuseppe Prateri, and Domingos Caraqueños, made by Lucas Manzano and Enrique Zimmermann in 1918.
  3. ^ The images relating to the film were included on disc 3.
  4. ^ The clipping reads:
    * Premiere of the portentous device The Cinematographer (perfected Vitascope). Names of the shows: 1st The Champs Elysees (Paris). 2nd A celebrated specialist pulling teeth in the Great Hotel Europa (Maracaibo). 3rd Children bathing at Lake Maracaibo. 4th The arrival of a train.
    ** Spanish: Estreno del portentoso aparato El Cinematógrafo (Vitascope perfeccionado). Nombres de los cuadros 1° Los Campos Elíseos (Paris). 2° Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el Gran Hotel Europa (Maracaibo). 3° Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo. 4° La llegada de un tren.
  5. ^ "The drawing of the tape suffered from some irregularity and the light that it gave on the frame did not seem well disposed: this way the figures were erased or confused pitifully [though] the pictures of the cinematographer seemed good, very particularly that of the children bathing in the lake, which was loudly applauded."
    ** Spanish: "El descorrer de la cinta adolecía de alguna irregularidad y que la luz que daba sobre el bastidor no pareció bien dispuesta: así se borraban o confundían lastimosamente las figuras (aunque) los cuadros del Cinematógrafo parecieron buenos, muy particularmente el de los muchachos bañándose en el lago, que fue ruidosamente aplaudido."
  6. ^ Guillermo was a nationally-recognized poet and politician, whom assisted Manuel with his business ventures.
  7. ^ A business partner, Luis Manuel Méndez, is credited with this.
  8. ^ The other factor she mentions is the partnership of Carlos Ruiz Chapellín and W. O. Wolcopt, who created early films that could be considered slapstick comedy.

References

Sources

Literature
  • Azuaga García, Jesús Ricardo (September 2015). Pandemonium: La Filmografia de Roman Chalbaud en el Cine Venezolano: Contexto y Analisis [Pandemonium: The Filmography of Roman Chalbaud and the Cinema of Venezuela] (PDF) (Thesis) (in Spanish). Universitat de Valencia.
  • Calvo, Guadi (2003). "Román Chalbaud: La voz definitiva" [Román Chalbaud: The definitive voice]. Archipielago. Revista cultural de nuestra América (in Spanish). 11 (41).
  • Carro, Nelson (1997). "Un siglo de cine en América Latina" [A century of Latin American cinema]. Política y Cultura (in Spanish). 8. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  • Chanan, Michael (1996). "Section 2, Sound Cinema 1930-1960 "Cinema in Latin America"". In Nowell-Smith, Geoffrey (ed.). The Oxford History of World Cinema. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198742425.
  • Correa, Luzmar; Jerez, Zuhé; Rojas, Ana (April 2011). Castillo, Jorge (ed.). Documental sobre el inicio de las casas productoras de cine en Venezuela [Document about the beginnings of the production houses of Venezuelan cinema] (PDF) (Thesis) (in Spanish). Universidad Católica Andrés Bello.
  • Farrell, Michelle Leigh (24 August 2011). A "Revolution of Consciousness": Redefining Venezuelan National Identities Through Cinema (PDF) (Thesis). Georgetown University.
  • International Bureau of the American Republics (1897). Commercial directory of the American republics, : comprising the manufacturers, merchants, shippers, and banks and bankers engaged in foreign trade; together with the names of officials, maps, commercial statistics, industrial data, and other information concerning the countries of the International union of American republics, the American colonies, and Hawaii. Government Print Office of Washington.
  • Hart, Stephen M. (15 October 2014). Latin American Cinema. Reaktion Books. ISBN 9781780234038.
  • Izaguirre, Rodolfo (2000). "Un cine en busca de... tantas cosas" [A cinema tradition in search of... so many things]. In Baptista, Asdrúbal (ed.). Venezuela Siglo XX: Visiones y Testimonios [20th Century Venezuela: Visions and Testimonies] (in Spanish). Vol. 1. Fundación Polar. ISBN 978-980-379-015-8.
  • Izaguirre, Rodolfo; Cortés Bargalló, Luis (1998). La lengua española y los medios de comunicación vol. 2: En el cine venezolano, la lengua es el asalto [The Spanish language and media of communication vol. 2: In the cinema of Venezuela, language is an attack] (in Spanish). Siglo XXI Editores, Secretary of Public Education. ISBN 9789682321115.
  • López, Ana M. (2003). "'Train of Shadows': Early Cinema and Modernity in Latin America". In Shohat, Ella; Stam, Robert (eds.). Multiculturalism, Postcoloniality, and Transnational Media. Rutgers University Press. pp. 99–128. ISBN 9780813532356.
  • Martínez de Badra, Elisa (2011). El guión: fin y transición [The script: end and transition]. Universidad Católica Andres Bello. ISBN 9789802441433.
  • Milano, Ismar; López, Pedro (2017). "Los Servicios de Alojamiento en Maracaibo-Venezuela: 1830-1920" [The Services of Accommodation in Maracaibo-Venezuela: 1830-1920] (PDF). Trienal de Investigación FAU-UCV (in Spanish). Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  • Retamal Muñoz, Leonel Alexi (2010). "Ya no basta con grabar: Presencia y permanencia de la cuestión social en el cambio de enfoque del cine documental chileno (1919 – 1959)" [Not enough filming: Presence and permanence of the social question in the change in focus of Chilean documentary filmmaking (1919-1959)]. Tesina Diplomado América Latina, Desarrollo y Cultura: Desafíos de la Globalización – via Universidad de Santiago de Chile.
  • Rist, Peter (2014). Historical dictionary of South American cinema. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 9780810880368. OCLC 879947308.
  • Schroeder Rodríguez, Paul A. (8 March 2016). Latin American Cinema: A Comparative History. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520963535.
  • Semprún Parra, Jesús Ángel; Hernández, Luis Guillermo (2018). Luis Perozo Cervantes (ed.). Diccionario General del Zulia [General Dictionary of Zulia] (in Spanish). Vol. 1. Sultana del Lago. ISBN 9781976873034.
  • Soltero Sánchez, Evangelina (1997). "Prosa de vanguardia: tres caminos hacia el séptimo arte" [Prose of vanguard: three paths walked in the seventh art] (pdf). Anales de Literatura Hispanoamericana (in Spanish) (26). ISSN 0210-4547.
  • Straka, Tomás (2018). Historical dictionary of Venezuela. Guzmán Mirabal, Guillermo; Cáceres, Alejandro E.; Rudolph, Donna Keyse (Third ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781538109496. OCLC 993810331.
  • Sueiro Villanueva, Yolanda (2007). Inicios de la exhibición cinematográfica en Caracas (1896–1905) [Beginnings of the cinema exhibition in Caracas (1896–1905)] (in Spanish) (1 ed.). Fondo Editorial de Humanidades y Educación, Universidad Central de Venezuela. ISBN 978-9800023952. OCLC 225867560.
News
  • ['Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo' en the 21st century]. El Nacional (in Spanish). 22 December 2016. Archived from the original on 20 March 2019. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
  • Longo, Carmela (26 January 2019). [Venezuelan cinema searches to stay active]. Últimas Noticias (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 25 April 2019. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  • "Homenaje a Manuel Trujillo Durán" [Homage to Manuel Trujillo Durán]. Notitarde (in Spanish). 20 November 2016. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
  • Sanchez Amaya, Humberto (13 January 2019). [A genre with lots of publicity and a distant past]. El Nacional. Archived from the original on 13 January 2019. Retrieved 7 March 2019 – via pressreader.com. Alt URL
Video
  • Güerere, Abdel (25 January 2017). "Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo Siglo XXI" [Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo 21st Century]. YouTube (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 September 2019.
  • Historia Viva: La Casa de la Bahía [Living History: La Casa de la Bahía] (in Spanish). Historia Viva. 13 August 2013. Event occurs at 25:35-27:27. Retrieved 24 April 2019.
Web
  • "El cine nacional está de fiesta" [National cinema is having a party] (in Spanish). Centro Nacional Autónomo de Cinematografía. 26 January 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  • Serrano, Arturo (10 November 2014). "Los heroes del cine venezolano (Parte I)" [The heroes of Venezuelan Cinema (Part I)]. Vice Versa (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 September 2019.

External links

  • Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa at IMDb

célebre, especialista, sacando, muelas, gran, hotel, europa, english, celebrated, specialist, pulling, teeth, grand, hotel, europa, first, venezuelan, film, screened, baralt, theatre, maracaibo, zulia, january, 1897, second, film, block, four, note, block, als. Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa English A celebrated specialist pulling teeth at the grand Hotel Europa was the first Venezuelan film It was screened at the Baralt Theatre in Maracaibo Zulia on 28 January 1897 as the second in a film block of four note 1 the block also featured another film from Maracaibo Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo English Children bathing at the lagoon of Maracaibo Little is known about the film s production and scholars are uncertain of the identity of its director Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel EuropaFrame from the filmDirected byUnknown possibly Manuel Trujillo Duran or Gabriel VeyreRelease date28 January 1897CountryVenezuelaNo complete copies of the original film survive During the 2010s a reconstruction of the film was produced in Venezuela with preserved photographs from the original In the film a dental surgeon at the Hotel Europa in Maracaibo pulls a man s teeth Although the subject matter could make it an early horror film scholars agree that the film was an actuality film A contemporary reviewer criticized the screening for its inappropriate projection speed and theatre lighting but gave praise to the film Contents 1 Film content 2 Screening 3 Production and director 4 Modern critical views 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksFilm content EditAs suggested by its title the film depicts a celebrated surgeon pulling a patient s teeth at the Hotel Europa in Maracaibo The story was described by the film historian Ana Lopez as a somewhat precarious dental extraction 1 Jesus Ricardo Azuaga Garcia described the film as being stylistically similar to Lumiere films possibly emulating them saying that it illustrates one of those more or less everyday activities that the French film pioneers used to show in their films 2 Azuaga Garcia notes that this was to be unusual for early Venezuelan film and cites only three examples 3 note 2 Although no copies of the film were preserved the Venezuelan Association of Film Exhibitors produced a part reconstruction of Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa English A celebrated specialist pulling teeth at the grand Hotel Europa and Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo English Children bathing in the lagoon of Maracaibo in January 2017 for the 120th anniversary of their premieres The Association collected frames from the 1890s which had been stored in the Zulia Photographic Archive restoring and adding color to the images to recreate the approximate look of the films Abdel Guerere wrote and produced the restoration which was directed by Emiliano Faria 4 5 A 1991 DVD history of Venezuelan cinema referred to the film the DVD included an image of the extraction and one of the Hotel Europa 6 note 3 The identity of the dentist featured in the film is not known The Diccionario General de Zulia identifies Vicente Toledo as the only well known dentist in late 19th century Venezuela 7 The 1897 Commercial Directory of American Republics cites two registered dentists in Maracaibo Elias A Capriles and Gaspar Elias Gonzalez 8 Gonzalez was the inaugural president of the Fraternidad Odontologica del Zulia English Zulian Organization of Dentistry in 1916 7 The Hotel Europa which features in the film was sold and remodeled as the Hotel Zulia in 1913 9 it was ultimately demolished in 1956 and the site used to build the Maracaibo Municipal Council building 10 A still of dental extraction used in the reconstructed film The Hotel Europa in Maracaibo around the time the film was madeScreening Edit Newspaper clipping announcing the showing of the films note 4 The film screening of Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa took place on 28 January 1897 at 7 00 pm 11 at the Teatro Baralt in Maracaibo 12 where the first films shown in the country imported American short films had been screened 13 Another Venezuelan film Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo was also shown this film depicted people bathing at Lake Maracaibo and views of the city 14 Two French films made by the Lumiere brothers were also screened One of these shown last of the four was the famous L Arrivee d un train en gare de La Ciotat According to film historian Peter Rist these films were projected on this occasion by Gabriel Veyre a film director and projectionist for the Lumiere company 15 Rodolfo Izaguirre has suggested that in addition to the Venezuelan and French films American films by Thomas Edison were shown as well 16 The films were screened after a performance of Gaetano Donizetti s opera La favorita 17 18 A contemporary review in El Cronista noted that the films seemed to have been made well but their screening was poorly executed The reviewer noted that the projection speed of the films was initially irregular and the theatre lighting was too bright for films 19 note 5 Production and director Edit A portrait of Manuel Trujillo Duran at the time The director of the film is unknown scholars and researchers have suggested that the most likely people to be the director would be Manuel Trujillo Duran a photographer from Maracaibo or Veyre the French traveling filmmaker Film scholar lecturer and Trujillo biographer Alexis Fernandez 20 discussed the production of the first films in a 2013 television interview agreeing that there is no tangible evidence indicating who the director was 21 For many years film scholarship believed Trujillo had brought the Vitascope to Venezuela 22 Sources have also suggested that Trujillo with or without his brother Guillermo note 6 made the early films 23 24 25 Though it was determined that Trujillo did not introduce the Vitascope note 7 the associated belief that he made the first films has persisted in some parts of Venezuela 22 By 2018 it was generally accepted in local and national Venezuelan media that Trujillo did not make the film 26 The likelihood of Trujillo being the director has been a subject of debate among Venezuelan film scholars Those who dispute it refer to evidence that shows Trujillo probably did not have a camera with the capability to make films and the fact that he was in Tachira at the time of the screening 27 On the other side proponents of Trujillo as director note his proximity to the introduction of Venezuelan film and his relationship with American camera companies 28 Veteran Venezuelan film critic Rodolfo Izaguirre says that the films are presumed to be made by him 16 and Venezuelan film histories that support Trujillo note that it is said he was the director 28 Outside of analysis an article in the newspaper Ultimas Noticias about National Film Day events in January 2019 celebrated Trujillo for making and projecting the film himself and outfitting the Baralt Theatre so the films could be shown 29 Proposing another director in 2018 Jesus Angel Semprun Parra and Luis Guillermo Hernandez wrote that the French camera operator and filmmaker Veyre was more likely to have made the film They come to this view by noting that while Trujillo left Maracaibo en route to Colombia in early January 1897 Veyre and his associate C F Bernard arrived in Venezuela in January 1897 as part of their filmmaking tour of Latin America and the Caribbean 30 In a 2014 profile of Veyre Venezuelan film professor Arturo Serrano wrote that he made no films in Venezuela 31 Modern critical views EditAna Lopez suggests that Un celebre especialista may be not only the first Venezuelan film but may also contain the earliest views shot in Latin America 1 though Evangelina Soltero Sanchez suggests earlier dates for films produced elsewhere in South America 32 Lopez writes that the subject of dental surgery similar to a few other early Latin American films created a veneer of scientific objectivity that perfectly rationalized its more thrilling appeals and gave a contemporary audience justification for watching a film when they were otherwise considered spectacles However Lopez notes that the prevailing scholarly narrative that many Latin American films had science related themes is inaccurate she cites four films related to science only one of which was produced after 1900 She suggests that films produced in Latin America were influenced by the upcoming 1900 Paris Exposition where they might be shown 33 In his book Latin American Cinema A Comparative History Paul A Schroeder Rodriguez describes early Latin American films as generally reflective of the air of self sufficiency of the early pioneers as if they were looking at themselves and liked what they saw and cited Un celebre especialista as an example that speak s for itself 24 Stephen M Hart provides an insight into the cool welcome given the film in his book saying that whilst it fit the mold of the actualite a short film demonstrating actual events audiences were quickly numbed by seeing many of these in succession and began craving more interesting material than a dentist s antics 34 Michelle Leigh Farrell discusses 20th century Venezuelan cinema in her 2011 paper noting its lack of presence and marginal influence in South America despite Venezuela having produced some of the first Latin American films Farrell believes that this early success influenced the Venezuelan government to capitalize on the early films monopolizing the industry with poorly managed production companies which made newsreels and films supporting the government 35 Michael Chanan suggests that although Venezuela was typical of Latin American nations many of which did not continue their early production of entertainment films there may be a rich trove of hidden independent films such as the works of Edgar J Anzola which have been missing for decades 36 Elisa Martinez de Badra compares the film to its few predecessors writing that the Edison films shown in Maracaibo in 1896 were theatrical spectacle but Un celebre especialista was not she describes it as new media Martinez adds that the form of Un celebre especialista and Muchachos banandose is one of two factors that contributed to the development of a narrative approach in Venezuelan cinema note 8 37 Examining The House at the End of Time as the first Venezuelan horror film Robert Gomez suggests that Un celebre especialista may actually hold this position It s not for no reason that the figure of the dentist exists in lots of B movies and art films as the character that uses his office to torture victims Think Marathon Man Gomez adds that although the unknown director was not making a genre film one can not ignore the reaction of the spectator who probably saw in it as is natural a terrifying story in the same way that many spectators reacted to L Arrivee d un train en gare de La Ciotat by the Lumiere brothers 38 Notes Edit The first film in the block was the French Les Champs Elysees The first of these three is Un celebre especialista The other two are La salida de la Misa de San Francisco an 1899 film by Filippi Domini and Giuseppe Prateri and Domingos Caraquenos made by Lucas Manzano and Enrique Zimmermann in 1918 The images relating to the film were included on disc 3 The clipping reads Premiere of the portentous device The Cinematographer perfected Vitascope Names of the shows 1st The Champs Elysees Paris 2nd A celebrated specialist pulling teeth in the Great Hotel Europa Maracaibo 3rd Children bathing at Lake Maracaibo 4th The arrival of a train Spanish Estreno del portentoso aparato El Cinematografo Vitascope perfeccionado Nombres de los cuadros 1 Los Campos Eliseos Paris 2 Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el Gran Hotel Europa Maracaibo 3 Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo 4 La llegada de un tren The drawing of the tape suffered from some irregularity and the light that it gave on the frame did not seem well disposed this way the figures were erased or confused pitifully though the pictures of the cinematographer seemed good very particularly that of the children bathing in the lake which was loudly applauded Spanish El descorrer de la cinta adolecia de alguna irregularidad y que la luz que daba sobre el bastidor no parecio bien dispuesta asi se borraban o confundian lastimosamente las figuras aunque los cuadros del Cinematografo parecieron buenos muy particularmente el de los muchachos banandose en el lago que fue ruidosamente aplaudido Guillermo was a nationally recognized poet and politician whom assisted Manuel with his business ventures A business partner Luis Manuel Mendez is credited with this The other factor she mentions is the partnership of Carlos Ruiz Chapellin and W O Wolcopt who created early films that could be considered slapstick comedy References Edit a b Lopez 2003 p 109 Azuaga Garcia 2015 p 29 Azuaga Garcia 2015 p 37 El Nacional 2016 Guerere 2017 Correa Jerez amp Rojas 2011 pp 91 92 a b Semprun Parra amp Hernandez 2018 p 1452 International Bureau of the American Republics 1897 p 1346 Milano amp Lopez 2017 Semprun Parra amp Hernandez 2018 p 1031 Correa Jerez amp Rojas 2011 p 9 Centro Nacional Autonomo de Cinematografia 26 January 2012 Rist 2014 p xxxi Azuaga Garcia 2015 p 42 Rist 2014 p 2 a b Izaguirre amp Cortes Bargallo 1998 p 752 Izaguirre 2000 pp 107 120 Calvo 2003 p 29 Azuaga Garcia 2015 p 28 Notitarde 20 November 2016 Historia Viva 13 August 2013 a b Sueiro Villanueva 2007 p 47 Carro 1997 p 242 a b Schroeder Rodriguez 2016 p 22 Retamal Munoz 2010 p 14 Semprun Parra amp Hernandez 2018 p 2060 Sueiro Villanueva 2007 p 54 a b Straka 2018 p 337 Longo 26 January 2019 Semprun Parra amp Hernandez 2018 p 528 Serrano 10 November 2014 Soltero Sanchez 1997 pp 432 445 Lopez 2003 pp 108 109 Hart 2014 p 13 Farrell 2011 p 21 Chanan 1996 pp 427 435 Martinez de Badra 2011 p 67 Sanchez Amaya 2019 Sources EditLiteratureAzuaga Garcia Jesus Ricardo September 2015 Pandemonium La Filmografia de Roman Chalbaud en el Cine Venezolano Contexto y Analisis Pandemonium The Filmography of Roman Chalbaud and the Cinema of Venezuela PDF Thesis in Spanish Universitat de Valencia Calvo Guadi 2003 Roman Chalbaud La voz definitiva Roman Chalbaud The definitive voice Archipielago Revista cultural de nuestra America in Spanish 11 41 Carro Nelson 1997 Un siglo de cine en America Latina A century of Latin American cinema Politica y Cultura in Spanish 8 Retrieved 15 December 2018 Chanan Michael 1996 Section 2 Sound Cinema 1930 1960 Cinema in Latin America In Nowell Smith Geoffrey ed The Oxford History of World Cinema Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198742425 Correa Luzmar Jerez Zuhe Rojas Ana April 2011 Castillo Jorge ed Documental sobre el inicio de las casas productoras de cine en Venezuela Document about the beginnings of the production houses of Venezuelan cinema PDF Thesis in Spanish Universidad Catolica Andres Bello Farrell Michelle Leigh 24 August 2011 A Revolution of Consciousness Redefining Venezuelan National Identities Through Cinema PDF Thesis Georgetown University International Bureau of the American Republics 1897 Commercial directory of the American republics comprising the manufacturers merchants shippers and banks and bankers engaged in foreign trade together with the names of officials maps commercial statistics industrial data and other information concerning the countries of the International union of American republics the American colonies and Hawaii Government Print Office of Washington Hart Stephen M 15 October 2014 Latin American Cinema Reaktion Books ISBN 9781780234038 Izaguirre Rodolfo 2000 Un cine en busca de tantas cosas A cinema tradition in search of so many things In Baptista Asdrubal ed Venezuela Siglo XX Visiones y Testimonios 20th Century Venezuela Visions and Testimonies in Spanish Vol 1 Fundacion Polar ISBN 978 980 379 015 8 Izaguirre Rodolfo Cortes Bargallo Luis 1998 La lengua espanola y los medios de comunicacion vol 2 En el cine venezolano la lengua es el asalto The Spanish language and media of communication vol 2 In the cinema of Venezuela language is an attack in Spanish Siglo XXI Editores Secretary of Public Education ISBN 9789682321115 Lopez Ana M 2003 Train of Shadows Early Cinema and Modernity in Latin America In Shohat Ella Stam Robert eds Multiculturalism Postcoloniality and Transnational Media Rutgers University Press pp 99 128 ISBN 9780813532356 Martinez de Badra Elisa 2011 El guion fin y transicion The script end and transition Universidad Catolica Andres Bello ISBN 9789802441433 Milano Ismar Lopez Pedro 2017 Los Servicios de Alojamiento en Maracaibo Venezuela 1830 1920 The Services of Accommodation in Maracaibo Venezuela 1830 1920 PDF Trienal de Investigacion FAU UCV in Spanish Retrieved 26 October 2019 Retamal Munoz Leonel Alexi 2010 Ya no basta con grabar Presencia y permanencia de la cuestion social en el cambio de enfoque del cine documental chileno 1919 1959 Not enough filming Presence and permanence of the social question in the change in focus of Chilean documentary filmmaking 1919 1959 Tesina Diplomado America Latina Desarrollo y Cultura Desafios de la Globalizacion via Universidad de Santiago de Chile Rist Peter 2014 Historical dictionary of South American cinema Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 9780810880368 OCLC 879947308 Schroeder Rodriguez Paul A 8 March 2016 Latin American Cinema A Comparative History University of California Press ISBN 9780520963535 Semprun Parra Jesus Angel Hernandez Luis Guillermo 2018 Luis Perozo Cervantes ed Diccionario General del Zulia General Dictionary of Zulia in Spanish Vol 1 Sultana del Lago ISBN 9781976873034 Soltero Sanchez Evangelina 1997 Prosa de vanguardia tres caminos hacia el septimo arte Prose of vanguard three paths walked in the seventh art pdf Anales de Literatura Hispanoamericana in Spanish 26 ISSN 0210 4547 Straka Tomas 2018 Historical dictionary of Venezuela Guzman Mirabal Guillermo Caceres Alejandro E Rudolph Donna Keyse Third ed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781538109496 OCLC 993810331 Sueiro Villanueva Yolanda 2007 Inicios de la exhibicion cinematografica en Caracas 1896 1905 Beginnings of the cinema exhibition in Caracas 1896 1905 in Spanish 1 ed Fondo Editorial de Humanidades y Educacion Universidad Central de Venezuela ISBN 978 9800023952 OCLC 225867560 News Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo en el siglo XXI Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo en the 21st century El Nacional in Spanish 22 December 2016 Archived from the original on 20 March 2019 Retrieved 7 March 2019 Longo Carmela 26 January 2019 El cine venezolano busca mantenerse activo Venezuelan cinema searches to stay active Ultimas Noticias in Spanish Archived from the original on 25 April 2019 Retrieved 25 April 2019 Homenaje a Manuel Trujillo Duran Homage to Manuel Trujillo Duran Notitarde in Spanish 20 November 2016 Retrieved 24 April 2019 Sanchez Amaya Humberto 13 January 2019 Un genero con mucho publico y un pasado lejano A genre with lots of publicity and a distant past El Nacional Archived from the original on 13 January 2019 Retrieved 7 March 2019 via pressreader com Alt URL VideoGuerere Abdel 25 January 2017 Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo Siglo XXI Muchachos banandose en la laguna de Maracaibo 21st Century YouTube in Spanish Retrieved 8 September 2019 Historia Viva La Casa de la Bahia Living History La Casa de la Bahia in Spanish Historia Viva 13 August 2013 Event occurs at 25 35 27 27 Retrieved 24 April 2019 Web El cine nacional esta de fiesta National cinema is having a party in Spanish Centro Nacional Autonomo de Cinematografia 26 January 2012 Retrieved 6 March 2019 Serrano Arturo 10 November 2014 Los heroes del cine venezolano Parte I The heroes of Venezuelan Cinema Part I Vice Versa in Spanish Retrieved 13 September 2019 External links EditUn celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Un celebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa amp oldid 1111220040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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