The Photographical Congress Arrives in Lyon (1895) Poster

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7/10
Lumière's first true documentary...
jluis198415 May 2007
To many historians, December 28, 1895, is the date considered as the day where cinema was born, as it was in that cold day of winter when the brothers Auguste and Louis Lumière gave the first public screening of their new invention, the Cinématographe. The brothers' devise would change history of entertainment forever, as it took the idea of motion pictures from the uncomfortable and individual experience of Edison's Kinetoscope, to the more enjoyable atmosphere of a movie projected on a screen. On that day the brothers showed 10 films, and the majority of them were of the kind that later would be known as "actuality films", movies showing an everyday event. However, one of the 10 films was a bit more than a typical "actuality film", as it was actually the register of an event in a fashion more akin to what we know now as documentary films: it was the arrival of the Photographical Congress to Lyon.

While December 28, 1895, was certainly the very first time the brothers showed their invention to the world, it wasn't really the first time the brothers' invention was shown to an audience, as months earlier, the brothers had been doing private screenings for the scientific community of France. The 1895 Photographical Congress that was celebrated at the community of Neuville-sur-Saône in Lyon, was one of the places where the Lumières screened their films for the first time. "Neuville-sur-Saône: Débarquement du congrès des photographes à Lyon", is essentially the recording of the arrival of the members of the Photographical Congress to Neuville-sur-Saône, marking the first time a camera was used to capture something more "special" than people moving or trains arriving. This time the new medium was being used to actually register the event in real time, pretty much in the same way as TV News work today.

Nevertheless, that was not the only thing that "Neuville-sur-Saône" an interesting early short film. The movie was shot when the Congress arrived, early in the morning, and that very same day was shown to its protagonists in the afternoon. One has to wonder how the photographers felt when they saw the images of their arrival actually moving, as if the even was being enacted again. The very same people that looked into the camera (perhaps thinking it was a normal photography) was now watching themselves in a motion picture depicting short seconds of their lives. It was certainly a unique experience, and no doubt the success of "Neuville-sur-Saône: Débarquement du congrès des photographes à Lyon" and their other films that day prompted the brothers to keep working in their preparation for that December day, when the world witnessed what a group of photographers did (and saw) months ago. 7/10
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Interesting, Particularly in Comparison With "La Sortie des usines Lumière"
Snow Leopard10 March 2005
This interesting footage is particularly worth seeing as a companion piece to, and as a comparison with, the Lumière classic, "La Sortie des usines Lumière". The two features have much in common, and they are interesting for many of the same reasons.

In both movies, there is a rather sizable crowd moving towards the camera, knowing that they are being filmed. The main difference is that this movie features professional photographers, as they arrive to attend a congress of a photographic society. Their reactions are largely the same as were those of the factory workers, but many of the "professionals" seem more determined to hide their curiosity. On the other hand, a number of them show their interest even more eagerly, tipping their hats in a particularly jaunty fashion, demonstrating a bit of showmanship of their own.

As with the footage of the factory workers, the motion towards the camera is effective, and here the background scenery also has some interesting details. This film is also self-referential in one interesting respect, since the subjects of the film were also its initial audience. It's all rather interesting to take in.
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1/10
Filmmakers are filmed...
kobe141320 September 2014
Louis Lumiere sets his camera's sight on other filmmakers. As they exit the boat at Lyon, the attendees greet the camera. August Lumiere is one of the people filmed. As the people filmed were attending the Photographical Congress, they must have appreciated the camera set up before them. Some greet it, while others duck quickly out of the way.

The Lumieres were keen on filming everyday life. They wanted to record everyday moments in normal life. We are able to witness the styles of dress as well as the mannerisms of the people in the late nineteen hundreds.

YOU WILL LIKE THIS FILM, IF YOU LOVED: "Employees Leaving the Lumiere Factory" IF YOU HATED: "The Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots"
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4/10
Photogenic photographers
Horst_In_Translation12 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
And a whole lot of them is what we we see in one of Louis Lumière's earlier short films. They're stepping off the boat in their expensive suits, posh hats and walking sticks. Shortly afterward the ladies follow, equally well-dressed and then many more pompous men. The whole spectacle goes for 45 seconds, rather long for a Lumière short film from 1895. Everybody depicted seems to be in a quite good mood and even if they're certainly not 100% sure what exactly is going on, they're smiling to the man with the camera, occasionally even greeting him by taking their cylinders off if their hands aren't occupied by holding a cigarette. Okay short-film, not as boring as some others, but not among the very best from Lumière either.
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8/10
Film looking at itself.
the red duchess5 September 2000
This film is a virtual remake of 'Sortie d'Usine', perhaps making it the first self-referential movie. Instead of the workers streaming out of the factory, we have fellow cinematograph specialists disembarking a liner for a congress. Instead of workers silently doing their masters' bidding, we have colleagues, friends, peers, fearlessly greeting the camera as equals.

This is a film about film - the Congressionists walk with their cameras; this film was precessed immediately for viewing at the conference. Already, the Lumieres' desire to 'objectively' record the world has turned into a naval-gazing admission of defeat, of the impossibility of objectivity untainted by subjectivity or ideology. Godard once suggested that the most honest film would be of a camera recording itself in a mirror. This film is an early grasping of what he means.
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8/10
Louis Lumiere - scientist, manufacturer, inventor, photographer
jhaugh28 July 2006
Louis Lumiere was a businessman. Since he was in the photographic business (his families factory in Lyon, France produced what many considered to be the best treated glass plates used in photography at that time - the mid 1890s), he was also a photographer. But, I am sure, he considered himself first-and-foremost a scientist. He considered his new invention, the Cinematopgraph, to be a scientific instrument. That is why during 1894 and 1895, he spent quite a bit of effort to gain approbation from various scientific groups. He wanted to keep the photographic community, in which he was well known, appraised of his endeavors. One method of doing this was to attend, in June 1895, a congress of photographers that was gathering at Neuville-Sur-Soane - a town just a short distance north of Lyon.

Louis positioned his camera at the base of a gangplank down which delegates to the conference descended from a Soane river ferry. Certainly, all of the descending men and women knew, by that time, of Louis' invention - although it had not yet been made public. Later that evening the Lumiere brothers showed the congress attendees eight of their less-than-one-minute films. And in one of these films the members saw themselves descending from the boat.
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Only to be watched for its place in cinema history
bob the moo27 February 2008
I watched this film on a DVD that was rammed with short films from the period. I didn't watch all of them as the main problem with these type of things that their value is more in their historical novelty value rather than entertainment. So to watch them you do need to be put in the correct context so that you can keep this in mind and not watch it with modern eyes. With the Primitives & Pioneers DVD collection though you get nothing to help you out, literally the films are played one after the other (the main menu option is "play all") for several hours. With this it is hard to understand their relevance and as an educational tool it falls down as it leaves the viewer to fend for themselves, which I'm sure is fine for some viewers but certainly not the majority. What it means is that the DVD saves you searching the web for the films individually by putting them all in one place – but that's about it.

Anyway onto this film which is as the title suggests, lots of people getting off a boat. This is essentially a rerun of the Lumière film that saw lots of people leaving a factory and it is as exciting. The only thing that did make it interesting to me was the people in question react differently from those leaving the works in the other film. Maybe it is to do with their class, or maybe they are more savvy about cameras or maybe they are just told to do this but some wave, smile etc – a reaction you would get today but interesting to see it then when such a thing was very much a novelty.

Other than this point of interest though, I found the film to be what it now is – a historical novelty that can only be seen as such.
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10/10
The illusion of the dimension of the cinema is broken
luigicavaliere16 February 2019
From a boat descend the photographers who must participate in the congress of Lyone dividing in two diagonals to the right and left. After, someone greets the film operator. So the illusion of the dimension of the cinema is broken.
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10/10
Says a lot in its short 37 second run towards history.
PCC092125 November 2022
This film, along with nine other films, were shown at a Paris, mini-film festival, by pioneering filmmakers, the Lumiere brothers, in December of 1895. Most film historians place this date as the start of the film industry. The third movie ever shown to a paying audience, actually says a lot in its short 37 second runtime. The photographers disembark off of a passenger ferry in Neuville-sur-Saône, Rhône, France. Try to remember these guys aren't politicians, but photographers, assembling for a big meeting. The backdrop view of the bridge reminded me of various times in my life when I took a boat trip near a bridge that size. It created some nostalgia for me, which is the prime point of enjoying pioneering films from the silent era. Getting off a boat, feeling the waves underneath, taking in the fresh outside air, speaks volumes here. There are various restorations I found on YouTube for this film, that are really good. If you search you can find perfect versions of this movie.

I thought it was interesting seeing the photographers, tipping their hats to the film cameraman. It showed a respect between the photographers and the cinematographer himself. Being in the 21st century now and seeing it from this point of view, the first thing you think about is, a lot of these guys might lose their jobs someday to this new medium called moving pictures. They were having so much fun, assembling for their photography meeting, they didn't realize they were looking into their future, through the film camera lens of this new medium. Photography had been around for almost 60 years by this point and it begs to wonder if they felt threatened by the new technology that was looking them in the eye. The men coming off the boat created an atmosphere of foreshadowing. It was a preview of an era of innovations, that was coming to the world soon.

9.9 (A+ MyGrade) = 10 IMDB.
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Neuville-sur-Saône: Débarquement du congrès des photographes à Lyon (1895)
Michael_Elliott21 December 2016
Neuville-sur-Saône: Débarquement du congrès des photographes à Lyon (1895)

The title of this Lumiere Brothers film pretty much tells you what you're looking at. We see a group of people walking off a riverboat and coming close to the camera who catches their every move. There's certainly nothing ground-breaking about this early "actuality" movie but if you're a fan of these then you're bound to enjoy this one. I always enjoy watching these because it gives you a great chance to see how things were so many years ago. This one here features a lot of people so you get a terrific idea of the type of clothing that was worn during this period as well as a chance to see the various other things going on. This here is well worth watching if you enjoy these movies.
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Historical event more interesting than most
Tornado_Sam16 October 2017
Considering that the Photographical Congress arriving in Lyon was a major event, I suppose you could call this one more important than the Lumiere Brothers' previous efforts because the event is something that most people wouldn't see a lot of the time. This film captures simply what the title suggests: a whole crowd of photographers coming off a ferry. Indeed quite a few of the photographers notice the camera and while some tip their hats in greeting, others notice the camera and refuse to be part of the film by dashing off the screen quickly.

At only a minute watching, this short documentary isn't a waste of time. It will probably only be interesting to people like me who, believe it or not, somehow find entertainment in watching these things. Audiences nowadays will find it pretty uninteresting--except for if you're a historian. In that case it's a must-see.
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