The Diabolic Tenant
The Diabolic Tenant
| 30 January 1909 (USA)
The Diabolic Tenant Trailers

A man rents an apartment and furnishes it in remarkable fashion.

Reviews
Linbeymusol Wonderful character development!
Lollivan It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Roy Hart If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.
Sarita Rafferty There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
morrison-dylan-fan After catching landmark A Trip To The Moon,I found myself struggling to decide on what other work from Georges Méliès I should take a look at.Reading reviews from a fellow IMDber,I stumbled upon an excellent one for a Méliès movie I've not heard of before,which led to me getting ready to find out how devilish the tenant could be.The plot:Moving in to a new apartment with his bags,a man agrees on when to make the rent payment.Left on his own,the man pulls out furniture and his own family from the bag! Settling down in the apartment,the man suddenly remembers that the rent is overdue.View on the film:Displaying less of the literary ambitions of Moon,the screenplay by Méliès takes a minimalist approach in order to give the movie a clean setup which does not overshadow any of the visuals on offer.Mostly staying in one room, Méliès takes advantage of the minimal set-up to deliver constantly striking in-camera special effects,which still pack a punch of awe and wonder.Keeping events rolling in long takes, Méliès cleverly uses the dashes of smoke and ruby colours offered in colour tinting to cast a magic circle atmosphere over the tenant's devilish stay
JoeytheBrit I've seen quite a few Melies film over the last couple of years - mostly in roughly chronological order - and watching them in this way drives home just how impossible he found it to adapt to the changing times. Like Emile Reynaud before him, Melies failed to evolve, and essentially ended up repeating the same story over and over by simply varying small details. He could easily have staged this film, in which the devilish tenant of the title produces the furniture for his new dwelling from a carpetbag, as a basic magic show, because there isn't really much of a story. Melies film career would pretty much be dead within another five years, which is a sad thing - had he been able to harness that incredible energy that is evident in every frame of this stencil-coloured film to develop all aspects of his filmmaking talents he might have gone on indefinitely...
Michael_Elliott Devilish Tenant, The (1909) aka Locataire diabolique, Le *** (out of 4)Georges Melies film about a man who rents an apartment and furnishes the entire thing with one box. It's easy to see how the trickery was done in this film but that doesn't take away from the fun. The real highlight is the wonderful ending of how the man finally gets rid of everything.In early 2008 a box set with over 170 Meiles films will be released and it's certainly long overdue.
MartinHafer Only recently have I discovered the marvelous and very early films of the French genius Méliès. I call him a genius because his films are so inventive, so different and unique that he clearly transcended his contemporaries. Whereas the average films of his day were almost plot less and dull by today's standards, many of his films are still terrific in the 21st century.This movie, named THE DEVILISH TENNENT in Enlish, is packed full of the most amazing trick camera-work and even features hand colored cels--giving it a color look well before the days of Technicolor. Sure the color isn't perfect, but for its day it was amazing--especially since all six minutes of the film is in color--not just a tiny portion. And when it comes to camera tricks, the entire movie is one trick after another! A man moves into an apartment with just a suitcase. But, it's magical and he is able to pull out paintings, furniture, a piano, a fireplace and eventually even his entire family out of the suitcase--in a most convincing fashion for 1909. Then, later when he doesn't have the money for the rent, he packs everything up and disappears--leaving a BIG surprise for his landlord! This is just one of those "you gotta see it to believe it films"--as no review can do this amazing work justice.If you want to see this film online, go to Google and type in "Méliès" and then click the video button for a long list of his films that are viewable without special software.