The film, made in 1965, is called "Overture." It is also known as
"Ouverture: Ou Comme On Commence," which means "Overture: Or How One
Begins" in French, and as "Nyitány," which means "Overture" in
Hungarian.
"Title Overture/Nyitany (100418)
Physical 9 min
Produced 1965
Producer Mafilm Studios (0354)
Language Hungarian
Synopsis Colour x-ray photography shows the development
of a chick embryo from its early conception
until its escape from the egg, with Beethoven's
EGMONT OVERTURE as background music.
Credits Production: Janos Vadasz"
University of Waterloo
http://media.uwaterloo.ca/htbin/wwform/www/?TEXT=R42915992-42918197-/www/documents/082/cat/wwi770.htm
"Title Ouverture-Nyitany (03487)
Physical Color; Sound; 9 minutes
Copyrighted 1965
Distributor FILMS INCORPORATED/PMI (FI)
Producer CONTEMPORARY FILMS (CONTEM)
Audience Intermediate, Jr High, High School, College (IJSCA)
Prog type Educational
Subj rating General
Synopsis Using color x-ray cameras and other cinematographic
tools, Dr. Janos Vadasz, Hungarian biologist, has
recorded the development of a chicken embryo and
the hatching of a baby chick. Accompanied by music
from Beethoven's Egmont Overture, the film emerges
as a kind of hymn to life itself."
"That reminds me (since this is my favorite hobby horse), does anyone
remember a French short called OVERTURE OU COMME ON COMMENCE? It used
the EGMONT overture as background for a display of photographs and
films of embryonic development. For example, the 'knocking' motif was
used against shots of the heart beginning to beat, while the first
allegro subject traced the flowing of the blood. The finale involved
a chick breaking out of its egg. Since the film was French, I suspect
no pun was intended (not that English-speaking viewers could avoid
it)."
Post from rec.music.classical newsgroup
http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=10706%40venera.isi.edu&oe=UTF-8&output=gplain
The 9-minute film was made by the Hungarian scientist János Vadász. It
won the Grand Prix du Festival International du Film - Court métrage
and the Prix de la Commission Supérieure Technique at the Cannes Film
Festival in 1965:
Cannes Film Festival
http://www.festival-cannes.com/films/fiche_film.php?langue=6001&edition=1965&id_film=2891
I hope I've identified your film correctly. If anything is unclear,
please request clarification; I'll gladly offer further assistance
before you rate my answer.
Best regards,
pinkfreud |