A man attempts to take a picture of a woman at the beach.A man attempts to take a picture of a woman at the beach.A man attempts to take a picture of a woman at the beach.
- Director
- Writer
- Star
Photos
Max Linder
- Max
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Lucien Nonguet(uncredited)
- Writer
- Max Linder(uncredited)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Alternate versionsTurner Classic Movies broadcast a 13-minute version of this film with an English title and an unidentified music score,
- ConnectionsReferenced in Cinema Europe: The Other Hollywood: Where It All Began (1995)
Featured review
Thank goodness Linder made other movies
This is, contentually, a waste of time. It's just not funny.
It is, however, interesting. It gives us viewers a look at a different culture, another time, another place.
It is worth seeing, for those reasons, and because Max Linder was in it.
Linder is another of those now-overlooked motion picture geniuses, of whom motion picture history is just filled. (Look at, for example, the end of Edwin Porter. He finished his life working in a factory, ignored by the industry he did so much to create.)
"Picture" does not really have a story. It is a vignette, and a rather pointless one.
But the elegant Linder set a tone and a style that American cinema ignored, replacing it with the Little Tramp and Fatty Arbuckle.
To know and to appreciate film history and film heritage, you really ought to see this movie.
It is, however, interesting. It gives us viewers a look at a different culture, another time, another place.
It is worth seeing, for those reasons, and because Max Linder was in it.
Linder is another of those now-overlooked motion picture geniuses, of whom motion picture history is just filled. (Look at, for example, the end of Edwin Porter. He finished his life working in a factory, ignored by the industry he did so much to create.)
"Picture" does not really have a story. It is a vignette, and a rather pointless one.
But the elegant Linder set a tone and a style that American cinema ignored, replacing it with the Little Tramp and Fatty Arbuckle.
To know and to appreciate film history and film heritage, you really ought to see this movie.
helpful•22
- morrisonhimself
- Mar 19, 2009
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Max, the Snapshotter
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime13 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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