4/10
Minstril alert!
14 February 2014
Segundo de Chomón directed this strange film that is no doubt going to offend people today. It also shows how much the director 'borrowed' from his competitor, Georges Méliès--as most of the tricks were done the same way Méliès had been doing since the late 1890s.

The film begins on a set with a large stylized crescent moon and some stars. A woman appears and with the use of stop-motion, she pulls out a costume and shakes it and it becomes a Pierrot. Then, doing the same thing again and again, she now has five of them! Now, all five fall out of the sky (it's a nice special effect) and land. Here is where the movie loses steam. The characters start dancing back and forth and start changing into different characters--both male and female. In what I assume is supposed to be a funny ending, they ultimately all become black characters--which are literally actors in black-face. It wasn't very funny and is sure to offend a lot of folks today. All in all, a rather weak entry to the director.
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