One thing that mildly irritates me about YouTube TV is the way the DVR takes some of the documentaries about the movies, as well as the collections of shorts packaged together, and doesn't show them when I look for movies to watch. To be fair, the "documentaries" weren't necessarily made for original theatrical showing so they wouldn't be movies. In any case, I only see them when I search for stuff about to expire from the DVR. TCM ran a documentary called The Méliès Mystery back in May of 2025, but I only finally got around to watching it just before it expired.
Now, I assume most people reading a blog like this are aware of Méliès' film A Trip to the Moon from 1902, which is considered one of the more famous very early movies. Méliès was one of the pioneers of cinema, making movies from about 1896 to 1913, just before tastes changed and then the Great War made Méliès' type of movies passé. He fell into obscurity and dire financial straits, which led him in a fit of desperation to burn the negatives of his films that he possessed. This was a move that he would quickly come to regret.
However, it turned out that prints of some of the films survived, and only much later it was rediscovered that for a surprising reason there were negatives in the Library of Congress that over the past several years have been undergoing a painstaking restoration process back in Méliès' native France. Today, roughly half of the 520 or so films that Méliès made in his career are known to survive, which is actually pretty good compared to the percentage of a lot of other's people's work that has been lost.
The Méliès Mystery is part biography, looking at the filmmaker's life starting as the son of a man who owned a shoe factory and expected his sons to follow in the family business, to learning magic in London, through to discovering film with the Lumière brothers, at least if you believe this version of the life story. From what I've read, some of it is legend that has been reprinted as fact like in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. As for the negatives that ended up in America, Méliès sent prints to the US in the early days of movie exhibition, but thanks to poor copyright protection everybody basically pirated everybody else's movies. I think I've mentioned in conjunction with the Griffith shorts box set that I have that companies would include their logo somewhere on the set as a sort of anti-piracy watermark, but the duplicators simply scratched those logos out! So Georges sent one of his brothers over to America and used a two-camera system to make multiple negatives, so that his company would have original prints of his own films to distribute. Those negatives went through a life of their own.
The Méliès Mystery is a well-made movie that I think would serve as a good basic introduction for anybody who doesn't know much about Méliès or about filmmaking as it was in those very early days. For people who are more knowledgeable, there may not be that much new here. But the footage from the original movies is definitely worth watching again.
