L'enfant de la barricade (1907) Poster

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5/10
What a dopey teen!
planktonrules5 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This film must have been inspired by some of the civil disturbances experienced in France during the 19th century--when revolution was in the air. Just like you'd read in "Les Miserables", the film finds a group of revolutionaries in the streets creating a barricade against the army. At the same time, a young teenage boy is just trying to go out to get some milk for his grandmother. In the process, he's assumed to be one of the revolutionaries and when they lose an engagement with the soldiers, they are about to shoot the innocent kid. He begs to go home to bring Granny the milk before they do this and they agree. But then, the idiot actually returns and is about to die--when Granny steps in and saves the day.

An odd and sentimental film, this is watchable but not especially great. Dumb kid!
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Impressive Drama from Guy
Michael_Elliott25 May 2018
L'enfant de la barricade (1907)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

This film from Alice Guy clocks in at just over five-minutes and it's certainly one of the best that I've seen from her. In the film, a boy is out walking when he accidentally gets mixed in with some men who are fighting the revolution. Before long the group of men are attacked by the police who then see the boy and think that he's a part of what has been going on. If you like these early dramas then you'll certainly enjoy this film as Guy manages to bring some nice suspense to the story and for the most part the film was extremely well-made. I really loved the framing of the picture and especially the gun battle sequence. Just check out how well framed all of the action is. It's certainly very impressive for a film from this period.
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Barricaded Framing
Cineanalyst9 April 2020
Oh, forget the half-baked anti-war, mom-son melodrama revolving around a home and a barricade during the 1871 Commune uprising, "On the Barricade" is more interesting for how the shots are composed, framed--or barricaded. The name of the game in this production was clearly to make small spaces appear less confined. Paradoxically, this was achieved by confinement and cluttered layers, theatrically in the settings and cinematographically by the tight camera positioning and fluid continuity editing.

Not every film by Alice Guy and her production crew at Gaumont could be made on the order of their passion play "La Vie du Christ" (1906), after all. Reportedly, Guy nearly lost her job for that budgetary boondoggle, with its two-dozen-or-so robust sets and many more extras laying the foundation for an exploration of deep-focus photography. "On the Barricade," however, is almost as compelling, for its creation of space within far more limited confines. A backdrop seen through the door window of the mom and son's home (represented as one room) adds the illusion that there's a street setting behind what is surely a studio construction. The effect is furthered by exterior street views of the barricade and another shot of a militia rounding a fenced corner. The barricade set, too, is framed by the camera position at a tight side angle so as to not require much of a makeshift wall. Additionally, besides the eleven shots, there are four title cards, which were becoming increasingly common in films by then. "On the Barricade" may not be revolutionary, but it's quite resourceful.
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