Don Quixote (1903 film)

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FrenchDon Quichotte
CinematographyFerdinand Zecca
Production
company
Don Quixote
Opening scene
FrenchDon Quichotte
Directed byFerdinand Zecca and Lucien Nonguet
CinematographyFerdinand Zecca
Production
company
Distributed byPathé Company
Release date
  • 1903 (1903)
Running time
15 minutes (8 minutes, 1904 re-release)
CountryFrance

Don Quixote (French: Don Quichotte), also known as Adventures of the Ingenious Hidalgo Don Quixote, is a 1903 French silent short film directed by Ferdinand Zecca and Lucien Nonguet. The film is the oldest surviving cinematographic adaptation of the eponymous novel by Miguel de Cervantes.[1]

Drowning in the Ebro River

The film is described in the Pathé catalogue as a Grand comic scene in 15 tableaux from the Romance by Cervantes. 1. Scene: He starts out to defend the oppressed. 2. Scene: Thrashed, Knighted. 3. Scene: Fight against the windmills. 4. Scene: Imaginary foes. 5. Scene: Receiving the thanks of liberated convicts. 6. Scene: Sancho loses his Ass. 7. Scene: Fight against leather wine bottles. 8. Scene: Gamaches wedding feast. 9. Scene: He smashes the Marionettes. 10. Scene: Drowning in the Ebre. 11. Scene: Enchantment of Dulcinee. 12. Scene: A knight's test. 13. Scene: Sancho Pansa as Governor. 14. Scene: The Tournament. 15. Scene: Death of Don Quixote. [2]

Distribution and preservation

After its initial release in France in October 1903, the film was exhibited in December 1903 in Washington D.C. (USA). It was further distributed in 1904 in the US, in Germany and in Mexico, and in 1905 in Denmark.[2][3]

In 1904, Pathé released a shorter version of the film (840 ft. instead of 1420 ft.), including only the best scenes.[2] This seems to be the only version which has been preserved.

Analysis

References

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