CinéMagique

CinéMagique
Walt Disney Studios Park
Area Production Courtyard
Coordinates 48°52′2.28″N 2°46′48.86″E / 48.8673000°N 2.7802389°E / 48.8673000; 2.7802389Coordinates: 48°52′2.28″N 2°46′48.86″E / 48.8673000°N 2.7802389°E / 48.8673000; 2.7802389
Status Operating
Opening date March 16, 2002
General statistics
Attraction type Cinema
Designer Walt Disney Imagineering
Theme Cinema history
Audience capacity 1,100 per show
Duration 25 minutes
Director Jerry Rees
Writer Steve Spiegel
Composer Bruce Broughton
Wheelchair accessible

CinéMagique is a theatre show at Walt Disney Studios Park in Disneyland Paris mixing the live performance of an actor with synchronized movie scenes on a big screen. The attraction opened with the park on March 16, 2002 and stars Martin Short and Julie Delpy.

Plot

The show begins with a castmember reciting an opening spiel regarding the nature of the show : “Today, you are going to see a movie on the history of cinema spanning from silent films to today's modern films.” The movie starts playing a montage of early black-and-white films. After a few moments, a cell phone ring is heard, and a man in the front rows answers it. He eludes the castmember and walks on the stage while talking.

Meanwhile, the love scene on screen between a Prince and a Princess is interrupted by this man's noisy conversation. The angered Prince attempts to stop him, but is unable to reach him due to the movie screen. He then enlists the help of a nearby Magician to silence him. This Magician executes a magic trick which makes the man disappear from the stage in a plume of smoke, and reappear inside the movie (here portrayed by Martin Short). Short's character (known as "George") seems unable to recover from his surprise, and the Prince corrects him by punching him in the face. As the Prince and the Magician leave, the Princess (called "Marguerite"), portrayed by Julie Delpy, comforts poor George. Yet, the Prince, seeing this, starts chasing after him with a sword.

George escapes via a window to suddenly find out he's on the ledge of a high building with Harold Lloyd, in the scene of the clock tower from the Safety Last!. George finds a fire escape and eventually makes it to the ground. Just as he thinks he is safe, a pie is thrown at his face. He can see that many others in the street, including Charlie Chaplin and Laurel & Hardy, are engaged in throwing pies at one another. George gets into the action, and discover he can talk, meaning he has left silent movies.

Then, after angering an armed man by throwing a pie at him, George is backed down against a wall by a group of gangsters, in the scene from Angels with Dirty Faces. Before he is shot, two men appear behind the gangsters, distracting them and allowing him to escape. However, George's escape is too noisy, and alerts the gangsters, who start shooting at him. Clips here include scenes from Some Like It Hot. George then crashes through a window. At this point, he has left the realm of black-and-white films.

As George stands up, he realizes he is part of scenes from the movies Once Upon a Time in the West and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, with bandits standing before him. As George's phone rings, the scene uses Sergio Leone's method of extreme close-ups to build up a shootout. George reaches for the phone and the shootout starts using footage from multiple westerns, including The Magnificent Seven. In his attempt to escape the gunfire, George drops his phone, and then seeks refuge in a nearby shed filled with TNT and other explosives. A cowboy then shoots a crate of TNT, and sends George flying into the air.

George comes blasting out of a chimney on the rooftops of London, thrust into the universe of Mary Poppins. He is then immediately sucked into the song "Step In Time". Meanwhile, Maguerite has been following George, whom she fell in love with, and arrives in the scene of the shootout. She can only find George's phone on the ground. The film cuts back to George walking down a street during pouring rain (from The Umbrellas of Cherbourg). There, he meets Marguerite, who hands his phone back. Then, they call a taxi, but George is sucked down a puddle he jumps into. Marguerite attempts to follow him, but is unable to.

George has now dived underwater, coming across the Red October submarine from The Hunt for Red October (Marko Ramius is startled to see George through the periscope). George also meet the divers from The Big Blue. Then, as he swims away, he encounters Pinocchio, who attempts to warn him about a large whale. Suddenly, Monstro awakens and chases both George and Pinocchio.

Upon reaching the surface, George sees the Titanic approaching him. He gets helped out onto the bow by a lookout, only to see the ship hitting the iceberg. As passengers start running to the escape boats, George hears Jack Dawson calling for his life, and reaches the corridor of doors to find him. He opens random doors, each one revealing someone else behind. The scenes include John Cleese from A Fish Called Wanda, Inspector Clouseau from The Pink Panther, Hannibal Lecter from The Silence of the Lambs, Sully from Monsters, Inc., and Linda Blair from The Exorcist. Then, as the water is flooding the corridor, and right before George meets his demise, the wall he stands against opens up and he is grabbed.

George is now aboard the Death Star. He is quickly grabbed by a stormtrooper, who takes him to a hidden corner, just in time to elude Darth Vader walking down the corridor. This helpful stormtrooper is then revealed to be Marguerite. Yet, real stormtroopers start chasing them through the space station, and to escape, they re-enact the scene where Princess Leia and Luke Skywalker use the wire to traverse the chasm.

As they land on the other side, they are in a medieval setting. A nearby Knight notices George and Marguerite, and walks over to them. George begs for his help to get back to the other side of the screen in the real world. However, havoc breaks loose. Armies descend and a battle ensues between knights. Kevin Costner as Robin Hood shoots an arrow toward Marguerite, but she saved by George jumping on its way to stop it. The arrow has clearly punctured his heart, and the fighting stops. As the Knight removes it, he finds out that it had actually stabbed George's cell phone. Scared by its ringtone, the Knight crushes it. Then, he walks to the top of the hill and lightning strikes his sword. He throws it toward the screen, breaking it open and creating a portal allowing George to travel back to the Theater. He does so, but the portal closes before Marguerite crosses it. Finally, the Magician returns and creates a door for George to walk through. George then decides to go back into screen, and the movie ends with a loving embrace between them, complemented by a montage of famous on-screen kisses. The show closes with George and Marguerite skipping toward the Emerald City from The Wizard of Oz

Halfway through 2013, some scenes (when George opens doors in the Titanic, and during the 'kissing' scene at the end) have been replaced by scenes from newer movies such as: Ratatouille, The Incredibles and Narnia.

Cast

Title Year Director Main actors
Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory 1894 Louis Lumière
The Kiss 1896 Edison Manufacturing Company John C. Rice, May Irwin
L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat 1894 Louis Lumière
The Great Train Robbery 1903 Edwin S. Porter
A Trip to the Moon 1902 Georges Méliès Georges Méliès, Bleuette Bernon
Birth of a Nation 1915 David Wark Griffith
Cops 1922 Buster Keaton Buster Keaton
Plane Crazy 1928 Walt Disney Mickey Mouse
Napoléon 1927 Abel Gance Albert Dieudonné
The Battleship Potemkin 1925 Sergei Eisenstein Alexander Antonov
Nosferatu 1922 Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Max Schreck
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari 1919 Robert Wiene
Metropolis 1927 Fritz Lang Brigitte Helm
The Sheik 1921 George Melford Rudolph Valentino
Safety Last! 1923 Fred C. Newmeyer Harold Lloyd
The Battle of the Century 1927 Clyde Bruckman Laurel and Hardy
Behind The Screen 1916 Charlie Chaplin Charlie Chaplin
Angels with Dirty Faces 1938 Michael Curtiz James Cagney
Some Like It Hot 1959 Billy Wilder Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon
Once Upon a Time in the West 1967 Sergio Leone Charles Bronson, Henry Fonda
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 1968 Sergio Leone Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach
Tombstone 1993 George Pan Cosmatos Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer
The Wild Bunch 1969 Sam Peckinpah William Holden
The Magnificent Seven 1960 John Sturges Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen
Mary Poppins 1965 Robert Stevenson Julie Andrews, Dick Van Dyke
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg 1964 Jacques Demy Catherine Deneuve
The Hunt for Red October 1990 John McTiernan Sean Connery
The Big Blue 1987 Luc Besson Jean-Marc Barr, Jean Reno
Pinocchio 1940 Walt Disney
Titanic 1997 James Cameron Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet
A Fish Called Wanda 1988 Charles Crichton John Cleese
Trois hommes et un couffin 1985 Coline Serreau Roland Giraud, André Dussollier
The Pink Panther 1963 Blake Edwards Peter Sellers
Silence of the Lambs 1991 Jonathan Demme Anthony Hopkins
Monsters, Inc. 2001 Disney-Pixar
The Exorcist 1973 William Friedkin Linda Blair
Star Wars: A New Hope 1977 George Lucas Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford
The Three Musketeers 1993 Stephen Herek Kiefer Sutherland, Julie Delpy
Highlander 1986 Russell Mulcahy Christophe Lambert
Ran 1985 Akira Kurosawa Tatsuya Nakadai
El Cid 1961 Anthony Mann Charlton Heston, Sophia Loren
Henri V 1989 Kenneth Branagh Kenneth Branagh, James Larkin
Monty Python and the Holy Grail 1975 Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam Monty Pythons
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves 1991 Kevin Reynolds Kevin Costner, Morgan Freeman
Summertime 1955 David Lean Katharine Hepburn
Doctor Zhivago 1965 David Lean Omar Sharif, Julie Christie
Casablanca 1942 Michael Curtiz Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman
Gone with the Wind 1939 Victor Fleming Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable
A Man and a Woman 1966 Claude Lelouch Jean-Louis Trintignant, Anouk Aimée
Wuthering Heights 1939 William Wyler Laurence Olivier, Merle Oberon
Ridicule 1996 Patrice Leconte Fanny Ardant, Jean Rochefort
The Horseman on the Roof 1995 Jean-Paul Rappeneau Olivier Martinez, Juliette Binoche
The Rules of the Game 1939 Jean Renoir Marcel Dalio, Paulette Dubost
The Black Orchid 1959 Martin Ritt Anthony Quinn, Sophia Loren
A Place in the Sun 1951 George Stevens Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor
Carmen Jones 1954 Otto Preminger Harry Belafonte, Dorothy Dandridge
Cyrano de Bergerac 1990 Jean-Paul Rappeneau Gérard Depardieu, Vincent Perez, Anne Brochet
Who Framed Roger Rabbit 1988 Robert Zemeckis Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd
Brave Little Tailor 1938 Walt Disney Mickey Mouse
To Catch a Thief 1955 Alfred Hitchcock Cary Grant, Grace Kelly
The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc 1999 Luc Besson Milla Jovovich
The Wizard of Oz 1939 Victor Fleming Judy Garland, Jack Haley

References

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