The Mermaid (1904 film) explained

The Mermaid
Director:Georges Méliès
Starring:Georges Méliès
Studio:Star Film Company
Distributors:-->
Country:France
Language:Silent

The Mermaid (French: '''La Sirène''') is a 1904 French silent trick film by Georges Méliès. It was sold by Méliès's Star Film Company and is numbered 593–595 in its catalogues.

Méliès himself plays the gentleman in the film. The special effects include stage machinery, pyrotechnics, substitution splices, multiple exposures, dissolves, and what reads as a traveling shot (though in fact it is the action wheeling toward the camera, not the reverse). Film critic William B. Parrill suspects this film's visuals influenced Vasili Goncharov's The Water Nymph (1910).