UNLIMITED STREAMING
WITH PRIME VIDEO
TRY 30-DAY TRIAL
Home > Fantasy >

The Red Spectre

The Red Spectre (1907)

August. 17,1907
|
6.5
|
NR
| Fantasy

A demonic magician attempts to perform his act in a strange grotto, but is confronted by a Good Spirit who opposes him.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Cubussoli
1907/08/17

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

More
FeistyUpper
1907/08/18

If you don't like this, we can't be friends.

More
BeSummers
1907/08/19

Funny, strange, confrontational and subversive, this is one of the most interesting experiences you'll have at the cinema this year.

More
Jenna Walter
1907/08/20

The film may be flawed, but its message is not.

More
Horst in Translation ([email protected])
1907/08/21

"Le spectre rouge" or "The Red Spectre" is a French silent film from 1907, so this one has its 110th anniversary and it is a collaboration between Segundo de Chomón and Ferdinand Zecca, two of the greats from the early days of film, even if their names don't mean anything to most people today. It's their loss as these two were highly prolific and successful back in the day. And there work here looks spectacular in terms of effects, costumes and even colors. The red referenced in the title was nothing short of amazing and this movie was certainly far ahead of its time. But that is also a problem because the medium was not yet ready for the minds of SdC and Zecca and the evidence are these 9 minutes here. Without the use of sound or at least intertitles, it is virtually impossible to understand even very basically what was going on. Such a shame as this little film looked so good. But story trumps everything and that's why eventually I give it a thumbs-down. Not recommended.

More
He_who_lurks
1907/08/22

Before I go into this film, I would like to point out that it and another film by the same person entitled "Satan at Play" appear to be one and the same, though I haven't seen the latter. Still, IMDb gives both titles a page, and both titles have reviews written on them. Also, two colored prints of this film are floating around YouTube: one with a purplish grotto, and another with a milder, brownish tint which I've seen.Now to the film. It's about a mysterious spectre who puts on a diabolical magic show. Many of these tricks are something you'd see Melies doing years before, although one scene uses a closeup, which you don't see in Melies's work. There is also a subplot of one spirit constantly trying to spoil his fun, and in the end destroying him.For 1907 this was actually a full-length feature, at 10 whole minutes long. The beginning is entirely tinted red, but later other colors come into play. The demon's makeup is really quite beautiful and ghastly, and the sets are pretty good. The main problem is that the pacing is off. In Melies's work you're treated to one trick after another, but here there's lots of set-up and it does drag. That said, I would agree with those who say that while watching it it's as though you have entered another world, because it's visually astounding and has some excellent tricks. Even despite lack of story this is a very nice watch.

More
Michael_Elliott
1907/08/23

The Red Spectre (1907)** 1/2 (out of 4) Mildly entertaining French film from director Ferdinand Zecca was clearly influenced by the work of Georges Melies. In this film, in what appears to be Hell or something like it, a skeleton brings to life a couple women and then begins to do various tricks with them. That's pretty much everything you need to know in regards to the story as everything else is just one trick after another. There are a few good things about this film but at the same time it's just so easy to see that it's no where near the league of Melies and you have to feel that the French master was doing this type of film a decade earlier and doing it much better. I think the biggest problem is that there's really no strong pacing and after a while the 9-minute running time just feels like it's dragging along. There are several of the tricks, which simply aren't that entertaining and for one good example just check out the one where the skeleton wraps a woman up in some sort of tarp. How the trick was done is easy to spot. There are some good things however and this includes the scenery, which is quite nice to look at. The biggest highlight has to be the very good tinting and especially the reds.

More
Red-Barracuda
1907/08/24

The Red Spectre is a trick film from France in the style of Georges Méliès; although this one was directed by Ferdinand Zecca. It has all of the visual invention you would expect and it also has a nice red coloured tint which is perfect for its atmosphere.It's set in an underground cavern and features a demon warlock. This evil character possesses souls of several women. He manipulates them in several ways and generates television-like screens. All the while he is counterbalanced by a female nemesis that thwarts his evil actions and ultimately destroys him.It may be a short film but it's full to the brim with visual ideas. Characters appear and disappear, are shrunken and burst into flames. Walls are constructed and turn into giant monitors and rock faces move aside to show a cavern full of hell-like fires. It's relentlessly inventive basically. Worth seeing if you like the visual innovation of the earliest days of cinema.

More