The Nightingale's Voice
December. 21,1923A partly-animated short film, a fairy-tale-like telling of why the nightingale only sings at night. A young girl who has caught a nightingale dreams about the songbird and its mate, and comes to realize that birds are not meant to be captive.
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Reviews
brilliant actors, brilliant editing
I saw this movie before reading any reviews, and I thought it was very funny. I was very surprised to see the overwhelmingly negative reviews this film received from critics.
Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.
"La voix du rossignol" or "Voice of the Nightingale" is a 13-minute short film from 1925, so this one is already over 90 years old. The writer and director is Wladyslaw Starewicz, but despite his Luthuanian origins, this is a French production as the title already tells us. This is the story of the relationship between a nightingale and a little girl and the writing here is the biggest strength I think. It does not only make sense, but makes an impact on the emotional side and also as a dramatic movie. Besides that, Starewicz proved again that he was among the best European, maybe world-wide, animators of his time and it's intriguing to see how different this is from the American approach at animation in the 1920s. This is a contender for my favorite work from Starewicz and if you love animation, you should definitely check it out, maybe the colored version too.
The Voice of the Nightingale is Ladislaw Starewicz's most charming short about birds and their relationship with nature and humans. It stars his daughter as a girl who keeps the bird after he accidentally wrecks her doll while walking through her trap cage. The bird briefly turns into a rat while captured, frightening the girl (and us!). The captured bird sings hanging on a windowsill as the girl dreams first of a grasshopper and spider fighting over a pixie captured in spider's web, and then of the caged bird's wife, whom he was looking for when the girl got him, leaving their child alone. She wakes up and frees her pet. As reward, she now has a beautiful singing voice. Besides the story, there's also wonderful color-tinting to be awed and inspired by. So if you love Ladislaw Starewicz's work, seek out the DVD from Image Entertainment, The Cameraman's Revenge and Other Fantastic Tales.
Wladyslaw Starewicz was a true pioneer of puppet animation, an artist who devised new "pixilation" techniques as early as 1910 and was still producing fascinating movies right through the 1950s. At the time of his death in 1965 he was hard at work on yet another new film, one which, sadly, remained unfinished. Starewicz was unafraid to explore the darker corners of his imagination, and was therefore an influential trail-blazer for such latter-day filmmakers as Jan Svankmajer, the Brothers Quay, and Tim Burton. Starewicz' films usually feature animals whose behavior serves as a satirical comment on human foibles, and while some children might get a kick out of his macabre sense of humor I believe the man's work is best appreciated by adults.This film, known as "The Voice of the Nightingale" in its English language version, represents a pleasant departure for Starewicz, with a lighter and gentler story that makes it one of his more accessible works for general audiences. This is a simple tale of a little girl who traps a nightingale in a cage and intends to keep it as a plaything. While the girl is asleep the nightingale enters her dreams with his song, and narrates a legend set in the Kingdom of the Flowers. (This scene, featuring fairies and sprites interacting with grasshoppers, dragonflies, etc., may remind some viewers of the "Nutcracker" sequence in Disney's Fantasia.) But then the nightingale sings of his own sad plight, the tale of how he met his lady love, their courtship and the birth of their chick, and how his spouse, out hunting for food one day, narrowly missed being hit by an arrow fired by a boy. Since then, the nightingale has been searching for his spouse, and it was while he was searching for her that he was trapped in the girl's cage, leaving their fledgling alone in the nest and unable to fend for itself. Waking in tears, the girl sets the nightingale free with a new understanding of humans' proper relationship with the animal world.The story is simple but the exquisite technique Starewicz brings to bear on this material lifts it out of the ordinary. The film combines live action footage of the girl and her surroundings with animated puppets representing the birds, animals and the fairy denizens of the Kingdom of Flowers. All of this footage has been hand-tinted, and the title cards have also been specially decorated and colored. Starewicz expresses his darker side only once, when the newly captured nightingale frightens the little girl -- and the audience! -- by briefly transforming himself into an angry rat. Otherwise, "The Voice of the Nightingale" is a gently moving little fable, sweet but not cloying in tone. Like Starewicz himself, this film deserves to be better known.
What can I really say? I don't want to waste time talking about the technical aspects because this movie is simply pure joy. Too beautiful to remain obscure. Hey film festival guys: get this movie out there!