Snowball Fight
Snowball Fight
| 07 February 1897 (USA)
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Wintertime in Lyon. About a dozen people, men and women, are having a snowball fight in the middle of a tree-lined street. The cyclist coming along the road becomes the target of opportunity. He falls off his bicycle. He's not hurt, but he rides back the way he came, as the fight continues.

Reviews
Laikals

The greatest movie ever made..!

Flyerplesys

Perfectly adorable

ClassyWas

Excellent, smart action film.

Supelice

Dreadfully Boring

Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

Looks like everybody depicted here is having quite a fun time. Good for them. The kids join in. The men and women join in despite their heavy dresses and a cyclist passing by gets the full punishment. Nonetheless, these 45 seconds made a funny watch. It's basically everybody against everybody and nobody's crying because he got hit and everybody releases their inner child for once. No plot or storyline are involved, it's simply a documentary of a day in the snow, possibly the first winter day of the year looking at how happy everybody is. Poor guys who, in contrast to the ones in Lyon depicted here, live in areas where it never snows. they don't know what they're missing. Okay short-film by Lumière.

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JoeytheBrit

As others have noted, what convincingly appears to be a spontaneous snowball fight involving men, women and children from all classes is in all probability a staged event (the likelihood of a wandering cameraman stumbling upon such a scene is highly unlikely) but it is still extremely enjoyable and lent an element of slapstick by the hapless cyclist who wanders into the midst of the fight only to find himself unseated by a barrage of snowballs and beating a hasty and undignified retreat. The film has a terrific sense of liveliness and fun thanks to the obvious pleasure of the participants of the fight - and let's face it; who amongst us doesn't enjoy a good snowball fight?

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Snow Leopard

This brief footage of a snowball fight is both fun and funny. It gives a convincing appearance of spontaneity, but at the same time the camera field catches so much that it seems quite likely that at least some planning was involved. In either case, it's one of the lightest and most amusing of the early Lumière features.The participants include both men and women, most of them rather nicely dressed. Watching adults unashamedly romping around like this is good fun, and it's hard not to think of Laurel and Hardy or other similar performers. Indeed, the bicyclist who happens onto the scene would have fit right in as a character in a Laurel and Hardy comedy.As you expect with Lumière, the photography is good, but this time it is the amusing antics that will make this one memorable.

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Alice Liddel

This is a wonderful short depicting a snowfight on the streets of a French town. Two of the great masterpieces of European cinema - 'Les Enfants Terribles' and 'Amarcord' - have crucial scenes involving snowfights: this is the source of such a resonant set-up. This is arguably the first film to actually utilise the properties of monochrome, the brilliant white contrasting with the black chaos it contains.Although the film seems to embody a kind of anarchy, where all distinctions - class, age, gender etc. - dissolve in an egalitarian melee. 'Bataille', as with so many of the Lumieres' films is essentially conservative. Overlooking this alarmingly fluid mass are the fixed realities of place, home, property, and the bare trees, suggesting the inexorable order of nature and society.The snowfight, therefore, is not an overthrowing of the old repressive social order, but an example of what Bakhtin called the 'carnivalesque', one of those occasions set aside by societies (eg festivals, parades etc.) where the norm is overthown, where the peasant becomes king and vice versa; where there is a break from the norm, a playing at difference of status, before returning to the old routine and social relations. This is visualised in the fixed gaze of the camera, which keeps whole all the fragmentation it observes. Beautiful.

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