HALAMAN utama Google hari ini, Kamis 3 Mei 2018, sungguh unik. Untuk yang pertama kalinya Google memberikan pengalaman virtual reality 360 derajat dalam bentuk video dalam doodlenya. Google memilih pertunjukan teater dalam bentuk animasi karya Georges Méliès, seorang ilusionis yang juga pembuat film berkebangsaan Prancis.
Jika diklik, maka kita akan dibawa pada video Youtube 360 derajat. Gerakkan ponsel kita ke kiri dan ke kanan untuk mengikuti aktor teater yang bermain. Suara musik klasik mengalun sepanjang video berdurasi 2 menit 10 detik itu.
Rupanya Google mencoba mengenang mahakarya Georges Méliès berjudul À la conquête du pôle atau The Conquest of the Pole. Karya itu diproduksi Mei 1912. Méliès memelopori berbagai teknik film dalam aspek teknis dan naratif di masa awal perfilman, terutama dalam penggunaan efek khusus dan pembuatan beberapa film pertama yang bergenre fiksi ilmiah.
Georges Méliès ternyata telah mengubah dunia perfilman lebih dari seabad lalu. Dia melihat film dan kamera lebih dari sekadar alat pengambil gambar. Dia melihatnya sebagai kendaraan untuk berpindah tempat dan membuat orang benar-benar tenggelam dalam cerita.
Méliès menghadirkan keajaiban pada pembuatan film melalui banyak sekali trik dan ilusi. Salah satu cara untuk menghormati karyanya dengan cara yang paling inovatif dan imersif yang tersedia saat ini untuk menyampaikan cerita: Virtual Reality!
Melalui Doodle ini, Google menyoroti beberapa trik yang dipelopori Méliès sembari membawa penonton ke dalam sebuah dunia dan kisah yang ajaib.
Siapa Georges Méliès?
Nama panjangnya adalah Marie-Georges-Jean Méliès. Méliès adalah pria kelahiran Paris 8 Desember 1861. Ia meninggal di kota kelahirannya pada usia 76 tahun, tepatnya pada 21 Januari 1938.
Georges Méliès adalah seorang pembuat film dan pesulap sukses yang mempunyai sebuah teater yang kemudian dibangun kembali oleh pesulap terkenal Robert-Houdin.
Méliès kemudian merambah dunia film hingga kemudian memproduksi film pertamanya pada tahun 1895, Méliès membeli sendiri kamera perekam pertamanya sekaligus mempelajari teknologi perfilman. Kemudian ia memperoleh proyektor, mesin cetak, hingga perlengkapan lain yang dibuat khusus memenuhi keinginannya.
Film pertama Méliès adalah dokumentasi pentas pertunjukan teater Robert-Houdin. Berikutnya, ia kemudian mengombinasikan pengetahuannya tentang pembuatan film dengan teknik seni sulap. Alhasil, terciptalah sebuah film dengan nuansa ilusi. Contoh yang paling nyata adalah saat pemeran yang muncul dan kemudian menghilang, atau sebuah objek yang berubah wujud menjadi objek lainnya seperti yang lazim kita saksikan dalam film saat ini.
Karya besarnya adalah beberapa film berdurasi cukup pendek, hanya beberapa menit. Filmnya yang paling terkenal adalah "Le Voyage dans la Lune" atau Perjalanan ke Bulan, berdurasi paling panjang, yaitu sekitar 20 menit dan menjadi film paling kompleks yang pernah Méliès buat.***
French filmmaker Georges Melies (1861-1938) is the subject of today's Google Doodle, the first ever presented as a 360 degree VR animation.
Melies is an entirely fitting subject for this innovative new approach.
An illusionist and stage magician before he turned his hand to cinema in its earliest days in belle epoque Paris, he was an extraordinary visual stylist and technician who is still much admired a century on.
Google Doodles
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15/95 Wilder Penfield Google Doodle celebrating Wilder Penfield Google
16/95 Virginia Woolf Google Doodle celebrating Virginia Woolf Google
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18/95 Winter Solstice Google Doodle celebrating Winter Solstice Google
19/95 St Andrew's Day Google Doodle celebrating St Andrew's Day Google
20/95 Gertrude Jekyll Google Doodle celebrating Gertrude Jekyll Google
21/95 Children's Day 2017 Google Doodle celebrating Children's Day 2017 Google
22/95 Cornelia Sorabji Google Doodle celebrating Cornelia Sorabji Google
23/95 Pad Thai Google Doodle celebrating Pad Thai Google
24/95 Jackie Forster Google Doodle celebrating Jackie Forster Google
25/95 Halloween 2017 Google Doodle celebrating Halloween 2017 Google
26/95 Studio for Electronic Music Google Doodle celebrating the Studio for Electronic Music Google
27/95 Selena Quintanilla Google Doodle celebrating Selena Quintanilla Google
28/95 Olaudah Equiano Google Doodle celebrating Olaudah Equiano Google
29/95 Fridtjof Nansen Google Doodle celebrating Fridtjof Nansen Google
30/95 Amalia Hernandez Google Doodle celebrating Amalia Hernandez Google
31/95 Dr Samuel Johnson Google Doodle celebrating Dr Samuel Johnson Google
32/95 Sir John Cornforth Google Doodle celebrating Sir John Cornforth Google
33/95 British Sign Language Google Doodle celebrating British Sign Language Google
34/95 Eduard Khil Google Doodle celebrating Eduard Khil Google
35/95 James Wong Howe Google Doodle celebrating James Wong Howe Google
36/95 Eiko Ishioka Google Doodle celebrating Eiko Ishioka Google
37/95 Eva Ekeblad Google Doodle celebrating Eva Ekeblad Google
38/95 Fourth of July Google Doodle celebrating Fourth of July Google
39/95 Wimbledon Championship Google Doodle celebrating Wimbledon Google
40/95 Victor Hugo Google Doodle celebrating Victor Hugo Google
41/95 Google Doodle celebrating Oskar Fischinger Google Doodle celebrating Oskar Fischinger Google
42/95 UK General Election 2017 Google celebrates the UK General Election Google
43/95 Zaha Hadid Google celebrates the acclaimed architect for becoming the first woman to win the Pritzker Architecture Prize on this day in 2004 Google
44/95 Richard Oakes Google Doodle celebrating Richard Oakes' 75 birthday Google
45/95 Google Doodle celebrating the Antikythera Mechanism Google Doodle celebrating the Antikythera Mechanism Google
46/95 Ferdinand Monoyer The famous French ophthalmologist, who invented the eye test, would have celebrated his 181st birthday today Google
47/95 Google Doodle celebrating Giro d'Italia's 100th Anniversary Google Doodle celebrating Giro d'Italia's 100th Anniversary Google
48/95 Google Doodle celebrating Nasa's Cassini probe Google Doodle celebrating Nasa's Cassini probe Google
49/95 Google Doodle celebrating Fazlur Rahman Khan Google Doodle celebrating Fazlur Rahman Khan Google
50/95 Google Doodle celebrating Sergei Diaghilev Google Doodle celebrating Sergei Diaghilev Google
51/95 Google Doodle celebrating St. Patrick's Day Google Doodle celebrating St. Patrick's Day Google
52/95 Google Doodle celebrating Holi Festival Google Doodle celebrating Holi Festival Google
53/95 Google Doodle celebrating St. David's Day Google Doodle celebrating St. David's Day Google
54/95 Abdul Sattar Edhi Google Doodle of Abdul Sattar Edhi on February 28 2017 Google
55/95 Seven earth-sized exoplanets discovered Google Doodle celebrates Nasa's discovery of seven earth-sized exoplanets in new solar system Google
56/95 Bessie Coleman Google Doodle honours the first African American woman to get an international pilot licence on her 125th birthday Google
57/95 Caroling Google Doodle celebrates Christmas caroling Google
58/95 Today's Google Doodle features activist Steve Biko Google
59/95 Walter Cronkite Google celebrates Walter Cronkite's 100th birthday
60/95 Ladislao José Biro Google celebrates Ladislao José Biro 117th birthday
61/95 Google Google celebrates its 18th birthday
62/95 The history of tea in Britain Google celebrates the 385th anniversary of tea in the UK
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64/95 Paralympics 2016 Google marks the start of the Paralympic Games 2016
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70/95 Olympic Games in 1896 Google are celebrates the 120th anniversary of the modern Olympic Games in 1896
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94/95 Autumnal Equinox 2015 Google marks the autumnal equinox on 23 September
95/95 International Women's Day 2018 Google marks IWD with a doodle featuring a dozen female artists from 12 different countries
Best known for the unforgettable image of a scowling celestial body annoyed that a rocket ship has crashed into its eye in A Trip to the Moon (1902), Melies was most recently seen in Martin Scorsese's film Hugo (2011) where he was played in old age by Sir Ben Kingsley.
He was born in 1861, the son of luxury shoemakers who - after attending the prestigious Lycee Louis-le-Grand, completing military service and serving an apprenticeship as a clerk in London - shunned the family business to work as a conjurer at the Theatre Robert-Houdin in Paris.
Here, Melies developed a fondness for stagecraft and visual effects, working with mechanical automata, trapdoors and lighting, eventually selling his boot factory shares to his brothers and buying the theatre outright.
After seeing the Lumiere Brothers sensational moving picture camera in action in 1895, Melies rushed out to establish his own studio and began making films that featured clever illusions and tricks created by experimenting with double exposure, cutting and rewinding, building on his theatrical innovations.
Georges Melies ( Kobal /Rex/ Shutterstock )
Using elaborate painted sets akin to those of Paris's music halls, Melies was a true pioneer who played a key role in the evolution of cinematic technique and the medium's storytelling grammar.
He also had an acute sensitivity for the sort of blockbuster spectacle audiences would be attracted to.
Specialising in horror and steam punk science fiction, taking inspiration from the fiction of late Victorian visionaries Jules Verne and HG Wells, his most famous film remains A Trip To The Moon, which starred acrobats and dancers from the Folies Bergere and the Chatelet ballet.
As fantastic as this is, perhaps even more extraordinary is the later Tunnelling The English Channel (1907), in which he effectively predicted the advent of Eurostar and the Channel Tunnel.
Other celebrated works including The Vanishing Lady, The Haunted Castle (both 1896), The Astronomer's Dream (1898), Bluebeard (1901), The Impossible Voyage (1904), The Merry Frolics of Satan (1906) and Baron Munchausen (1911).
The aftermath of a cyclone in a short by Georges Melies (Getty)
Tragically, after more than 500 short films, Melies's career collapsed with the onset of the First World War. He went bankrupt and was forced to sell his back catalogue to Pathe.
An early setback had come when Melies planned to release A Trip To The Moon in America, only to find that Thomas Edison's representative Al Adabie had secretly copied a print of the film after bribing staff at a London cinema and had already released it in the US without permission - an early and particularly devastating case of film piracy.
Later reduced to running a toy stall and selling sweets at Montparnasse train station in Paris (as depicted in Hugo), Melies became so embittered that he dug a hole in his garden, filled it with what remained of his priceless reels and memorabilia and burned it all.
What was lost that dark day is almost too painful to think about.
However, he did live long enough to see his films reassessed and acclaimed and to receive the Legion d'Honneur before finally passing away in 1938.
27 films to look out for in the first half of 2018
27 show all 27 films to look out for in the first half of 2018
1/27 Black Panther Released: 12 February Director: Ryan Coogler Cast: Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong'o, Forest Whitaker, Danai Gurira, Martin Freeman
2/27 The Greatest Showman Released: 1 January Director: Michael Gracey Cast: Hugh Jackman, Zac Efron, Michelle Williams, Rebecca Ferguson, Zendaya,
3/27 Darkest Hour Released: 12 January Director: Joe Wright Cast: Gary Oldman, Kristin Scott Thomas, Ben Mendelsohn
4/27 Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri Released: 12 January Director: Martin McDonagh Cast: Frances McDormand, Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell, Caleb Landry Jones > Twentieth Century Fox
5/27 Coco Released: 19 January Director: Lee Unkrich ,p> Cast: Anthony Gonzalez, Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt, Renée Victor
6/27 Downsizing Released: 19 January Director: Alexander Payne Cast: Matt Damon, Christopher Waltz, Jong Chau, Kristen Wiig, Jason Sudeikis
7/27 Early Man Released: 26 January Director: Nick Park Cast: Eddie Redmayne, Tom Hiddleston, Maisie Williams, Timothy Spall
8/27 Fifty Shades Freed Released: 9 February Director: James Foley Cast: Dakota Johnson, Jamie Dornan, Kim Basinger
9/27 Maze Runner: The Death Cure Released: 9 February Director: Wes Ball Cast: Dylan O'Brien, Thomas Brodie Sangster, Kaya Scodelario, Giancarlo Esposito, Aidan Gillen
10/27 The Shape of Water Released: 16 February Director: Guillermo del Toro Cast: Sally Hawkins, Octavia Spencer, Michael Shannon, Michael Stuhlbarg, Doug Jones
11/27 Annihilation Released: 23 February Director: Alex Garland Cast: Natalie Portman, Jennifer Jason Lee, Gina Rodriguez, Tessa Thompson, Oscar Isaac
12/27 Dark River Released: 23 February Director: Clio Barnard Cast: Ruth Wilson, Mark Stanley, Sean Bean
13/27 Red Sparrow Released: 2 March Director: Francis Lawrence Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Joel Edgerton, Jeremy Irons
14/27 Tomb Raider Released: 16 March Director: Roar Uthaug Cast: Alicia Vikander, Walton Goggins, Daniel Wu, Dominic West,
15/27 A Wrinkle in Time Released: 23 March Director: Ava DuVernay Cast: Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, Mindy Kaling, Zach Galifianakis
16/27 Pacific Rim: Uprising Released: 23 March Director: Steven S. DeKnight Cast: John Boyega, Scott Eastwood, Charlie Day, Burn Gorman
17/27 Roman J Israel, Esq Released: 23 March Director: Dan Gilroy Cast: Denzel Washington, Colin Farrell, Carmen Ejogo Columbia Pictures
18/27 Isle of Dogs Released: 30 March Director: Wes Anderson Cast: Bill Murray, Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Tilda Swinton, Scarlett Johansson
19/27 Ready Player One Released: 30 March Director: Steven Spielberg Cast: Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke, Ben Mendelsohn, Mark Rylance, Simon Pegg
20/27 Avengers: Infinity War Released: 27 April Director: The Russo Brothers Cast: Robert Downey, Jr, Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johansson, Josh Brolin
21/27 Untitled Han Solo Film Released: 25 May Director: Ron Howard Cast: Alden Ehrenreich, Emilia Clarke, Woody Harrelson, Donald Glover
22/27 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom Released: 8 June Director: J.A. Bayona Cast: Bryce Dallas Howard, Chris Pine, B.D. Wong, Toby Jones
23/27 Deadpool 2 Released: 1 June Director: David Leitch Cast: Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin, T.J. Miller, Zazie Beetz, Josh Brolin
24/27 Ocean's 8 Released: 22 June Director: Gary Ross Cast: Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Mindy Kaling, Sarah Paulson, Anne Hathaway, Olivia Munn, Helena Bonham Carter, Rihanna, Matt Damon
25/27 Ant-Man and the Wasp Released: 29 June Director: Peyton Reed Cast: Paul Rudd, Evangeline Lilly, Michael Douglas, Michelle Pfeiffer
26/27 Soldado Released: 29 June Director: Stefano Sollima Cast: Benicio del Toro, Josh Brolin, Jeffrey Donovan, Catherine Keener, Matthew Modine
27/27 The Incredibles 2 Released: 13 July Director: Brad Bird Cast: Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Sarah Vowell, Samuel L. Jackson
Amazingly, a colour print of A Trip To The Moon was unearthed in a French barn in 2002 in which each frame had been meticulously hand-painted by a large female work force a century earlier.
The world greeted its restoration and re-release with the same excitement and anticipation of its premiere at a Paris fairground and the film continues to inspire affectionate parodies and homages in everything from the Smashing Pumpkins' video for "Tonight, Tonight" (1996) to Futurama (1999-2013) and The Mighty Boosh (2004-13).
Georges Melies dan Film Terbaiknya The Conquest of the Pole
If you’ve ever watched a science fiction movie, or one that uses special effects, then you owe a debt of gratitude to Georges Méliès, the subject of today’s Google Doodle and one of the few people who truly deserve to be called a “visionary.”
One of cinema’s most important pioneers, Méliès worked in an age when the medium was changing rapidly and when the whole world was obsessed with scientific discovery, explorations, and expeditions to the furthest reaches of the planet. So it’s fitting that a Doodle created in another age of fast-paced cinematic change — our current time — honors him by using some fancy technology of its own.
Méliès, born in 1861, was an innovator par excellence, experimenting with effects in his films that blew people’s minds in an era when film itself was still startling to many people. Employing things like time-lapse photography, multiple exposures, dissolves, pyrotechnics, theatrical machinery, and more, he dazzled his audiences. It looked like magic. (You can see some of these effects on the Doodle’s background page.)
Méliès was working around the turn of the 20th century, a time of burgeoning scientific exploration and big dreams about the future of mankind. The filmmaker tapped into those through his experimentation with effects, and through stories he told tales of discovery.
Méliès’s most famous film is probably Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon), from 1902. It’s a work of science fiction, inspired partly by stories by people like Jules Verne. In the almost 13-minute film, a group of space explorers travel to the moon, encounter a tribe of strange beings, capture one, and return to Earth. Méliès himself played the crew’s leader, Professor Barbenfouillis.
Méliès returned to that idea of being an explorer again and again in his movies, including 1904’s The Impossible Voyage, in which a group of explorers undertake an epic voyage to the center of the sun. And on May 3, 1912, Méliès released À la conquête du pôle (which translates to The Conquest of the Pole). The full film is 44 minutes long, and it pokes sly fun at the then-recent South Pole explorations of Roald Amundsen, with effects that give the whole story a magical feel.
Inspired by Méliès’s yearning for discovery and fascination with exciting new technologies, Nexus Studios, the creators of the Doodle, decided to try their hand at one of today’s most interesting burgeoning cinematic technologies: virtual reality and immersive 360-degree video. Bringing those two effects together, they incorporated some of the filmmaker’s favorite trick photography moves — multiple exposures and disappearing subjects among them — to make a short film called Back to the Moon, in homage to Méliès’s 1902 movie.
To watch the film in its full virtual reality splendor, you’ll need a mobile device (or one of Google’s virtual reality devices) and the Google Spotlight Stories app, available on Google Play or in the App Store.
Or you can watch it as a simple video below. If you click on the film as it plays, you can drag it around for the full 360-degree experience.