In the recent collection "Gaumont Treasures Volume 2", I have noticed that the dates attributed to many of these films by Kino are quite different than those listed on IMDb. I think much of this is because with such early films, determining when they were made (as well as by whom in many cases) is just guesswork. Whether "The Baptism of Calino" came out in 1910 or 1911, however, the film seemed a bit dated and limp when I saw it.
While the film is about the baptism of a child, this isn't 100% apparent by the action. Much of it consists of highly exaggerated acting by a group of people going to celebrate a baptism (though none of the actual ceremony is seen) and the sets are obviously fake. None of this is especially good and by 1910/11, such films were giving way to more naturalistic films. Nothing about this is natural or believable.
Out of the blue, midway through the film, the 'baby' walks off, steals a bicycle and goes on a made dash--followed by the members of the baptism party. I do have to commend the film for all the stunts (LOTS of folks were smashing and falling off their bikes) but none of it seemed well done. Too often, the people obviously were deliberately crashing into each other at slow speeds and none of it made much sense. In other words, slapstick for the sake of cheap laughs and not much more. Overall, a rather limp but watchable short film and not one of Jean Durand's better pictures.