Historical Dictionary of French Cinema

NONGUET, LUCIEN

(1868-?)
Director. Lucien Nonguet was a stage manager in the Parisian theater before he came to cinema, no doubt through his connections to former theatrical personalities likeFerdinand Zecca(both had ties to the Théâtre de l'Ambigu). Nonguet was hired on atPathéas a director and assistant to Zecca in 1901, and the two began a series of important collaborations. The first of these wasQuo Vadis(1901) based on the novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz, and this was shortly followed by the much lighter and more magicalféerie,La Belle au bois dormant, in 1902. The best known of the Zecca/Nonguet collaborations is the silent-film classicLa Vie et la passion de Jésus Christ(1905), which presents the life of Christ in a series of epic tableaux.
Nonguet also made a number of films at Pathé working on his own.When working alone, he seemed to prefer either historical reconstructions or reconstructedactualités, and both types of films have similar characteristics. They are composed of a series of tableaux, they are filmed in long shots with no camera movement, and they are often based on photographs or paintings of the events depicted. Nonguet's historical films includeLa Révolution en Russie(1905),Le Saint Barthélémy(1905), on the infamous massacres during France's wars of religion, and the grandÉpopée Napoléonéenne(1903), a sweeping, two-part epic of the life of Napoleon.The Épopée Napoléonéenneis of particular interest not only because of its popular success, but also because it seems to have been the model upon which Nonguet's later histories and actualités were based, and indeed upon which many Pathé histories and actualités were based.
Nonguet divided the film into two parts, one consisting of five tableaux depicting Napoleon's early life and childhood and the second composed of ten tableaux depicting his rise to power and the Empire. The tableaux are based on paintings of Napoleon by Jacques-Louis David, Horace Vernet, and others. It seems that Pathé composed the film so that the entire thing could be shown together or that any of the component tableaux or any combination of them could be shown separately, therefore maximizing the commercial potential of what must have been a rather expensive film to make. This structure was used again withLa Vie et la Passion de Notre Seigneur Jésus Christ(1907) by Zecca.
An interesting exception to this trend in the historical reconstructions isLa Révolution en Russie, which blends fictional scenes with real documentary footage, and features some variations in shot. This is a slightly later film, and it may show the influence of experimentation within the cinema as it began to evolve toward narrative.
In addition to reconstructed histories and actualities, Nonguet also made several burlesque films near the end of his film career, including films with silent-film iconMax Linder. These includeIdée d'Apache(1906) andLes Débuts du Max au cinéma(1908). Nonguet also had a number of collaborations with other Pathé directors, most notably his 1908 collaboration withAlbert Capellanion the remake ofLa Belle au bois dormant. Nonguet left Pathé in 1910 and went to work forÉclair. He made a handful of films with that studio and disappeared from view in 1920. His precise date of death is not known.

  1. nonguet, lucienDirector. Lucien Nonguet was a stage manager in the Parisian theater before he came to cinema no doubt through his connections to former theatrical personalities like Fer...Guide to cinema