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Princess Nicotine; or, The Smoke Fairy (1909)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
10 August 1909 (USA) morePlot:
A smoker falls asleep, and two mischievious fairies play with his pipe. He discovers this, and imprisons them in a cigar box... more | add synopsisAwards:
1 win moreUser Comments:
Perhaps the gentleman was smoking something stronger than tobacco? more (4 total)Cast
(Complete credited cast)| Paul Panzer | ... | The Smoker | |
| Gladys Hulette | ... | The Elder Fairy |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
5 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1 moreSound Mix:
SilentCertification:
USA:UnratedFun Stuff
Trivia:
The shots of the tiny fairies alongside the smoker were not created by double exposure, but by using a mirror and a lens that could keep both the miniature fairies and the full-sized man in focus. moreFAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (4 total)
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As a longtime fan of the early "trick films" I can heartily recommend this bizarre and ingenious exercise in nickelodeon surrealism. Although it doesn't display the boisterous showmanship of Georges Méliès' mini-epics, or rival the sheer beauty of Ferdinand Zecca's THE RED SPECTRE (the trick film nonpareil), PRINCESS NICOTINE can nonetheless hold its own as a clever, funny, and downright eerie exploration of the cinema's potential to capture fantasy on celluloid.
Produced at Vitagraph's Brooklyn studio, the film features a mustachioed actor named Paul Panzer who would become best known playing the villain in the famous serial THE PERILS OF PAULINE. Here we see Mr. Panzer as a proper Edwardian gentleman seated, presumably in his home, at a table as well stocked as any tobacconist's shop with cigars, cigarettes, pipe, loose tobacco, and wooden matches. As the film begins the gentleman puts aside his newspaper and yawns and stretches in a histrionic fashion, suggesting he's already half asleep and that what follows may be a dream. Certainly what follows is dreamlike, for almost immediately the lid of a cigar box swings open and two fairies about the size of hamsters emerge. One fairy is a young girl while the other looks more mature and Glinda-like. The older fairy seems to be encouraging the girl to cause mischief, which she is only too happy to do. The gentleman realizes he is not alone when he attempts to light his pipe and finds a giggling fairy in the bowl, underneath the tobacco. The rest of the film involves a battle of wills between the gentleman and the fairy, as each one strives to hassle, harass, and torment the other. In the end, the battle is basically a draw.
The filmmakers utilized every camera trick available at the time to achieve their desired effects, and may well have concocted new ones. Double-exposure, reverse image, and stop-motion photography were all employed, as well as two old-time stage tricks: enlarged props and images reflected in mirrors. A book about motion pictures by Frederick Talbot published in 1912 devoted an entire chapter to this eight-minute film, and it's easy to see why: this movie represented state-of-the-art special effects for its day. Almost a century later, PRINCESS NICOTINE is still a delightful treat.