Le Cochon Danseur
Le Cochon Danseur (English: The Dancing Pig) is a silent, 4 minute long, black-and-white burlesque film released in 1907 by the French company Pathé,[1] apparently based on a Vaudeville act.[1]
Plot
In the film, a giant anthropomorphic pig, dressed in fancy clothes, dances with a girl, who later embarrasses him by tearing his clothes off. The two start to dance together, then walk into the curtains behind them. In the infamous final scene, the pig moves his tongue and eyes around and then bare his teeth, possibly in an attempt to show the puppet's mechanical abilities.[1]
Legacy
The film had fallen into obscurity for over a century, but gained more notoriety around 2007, a century after its filming. It became an Internet meme, with Clarisse Loughrey stating that the film "will definitely be entering into your nightmares tonight."[2][1]
Sources
- ^ a b c d "This 1907 silent film is all kinds of creepy". The Independent. 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2021-05-31.
- ^ "Le Cochon Danseur (The Dancing Pig)". Know Your Meme. 29 March 2011.
External links
- Le Cochon Danseur at IMDb
- A1 Blues (1998), 2019 Music Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NF-tZbClZw8
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- 1907 films
- French comedy short films
- French dance films
- French black-and-white films
- Fictional pigs
- French silent short films
- Films about pigs
- Film and television memes
- French films based on plays
- Articles containing video clips
- Internet memes
- 1907 comedy films
- Silent French comedy films
- 1900s French films
- All stub articles
- 1900s French film stubs