The Romance of Max

The Romance of Max (French: Le Roman de Max) is a 1912 French short silent romantic comedy fantasy film directed by and starring Max Linder for Pathé Frères.[1] The 6 minute, 8 second film was released on December 20, 1912. The plot may have been inspired by Emile Cohl's Matrimonial Shoes, (French: Les chaussures matrimoniales) from 1909, a shorter film with a similar storyline and animation.[2]

Le Roman de Max

Plot

Vacationing at the seashore, Max reserves a room at the same time as a pretty woman (Lucy d'Orbel). The shoes are left in the corridor for polishing, and perform an animated dance of courtship while their owners are asleep. The next morning Max seeks inspiration among the rocks as the woman sits on a bench. Their shoes escape and run up a cliff and towards each other, meeting in front of a park bench. Even as the people sit at the bench their shoes again display an attraction towards one another. Eventually Max and the woman also consummate their relationship.

gollark: What? No.
gollark: Which means that the government(s) can read *most* messages, and go "well, you're using [secure encrypted messaging thing], which obviously makes you a terrorist or something".
gollark: It's not possible to actually ban E2E, so I assume the intention is just to backdoor all the popular consumer stuff.
gollark: Any well-designed thing will provide forward secrecy, so they won't have that unless they deliberately log things, which is entirely possible.
gollark: And here. It's quite bad.

References

  1. Rège, Philippe (11 December 2009). Encyclopedia of French Film Directors. Scarecrow Press. p. 645. ISBN 978-0-8108-6939-4.
  2. https://www.fandor.com/films/matrimonial_shoes


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.