Cinema, for the First Time

Moon Projector #9

Ignacio Agüero, Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train), 1988, film

Ignacio Agüero, Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train), 1988, film

The final session in this Moon Projector season contemplates the feeling around the first experience of cinema — cinema as revelation, magic, fantasy and mystery from the first gaze, from the first contact with the medium, and imagery etched on the retina of childhood. The programme shows Émile Cohl’s landmark Fantasmagorie (1908), the first ever hand-drawn animation, and Ignacio Agüero’s Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train, 1988), a feature-length film on play and the origins of cinema.   

Fantasmagorie (1908)by Émile Cohl (Paris, 1857– Villejuif, 1938) is the first expression in the history of animated drawing. Émile Cohl was an illustrator who belonged to the Parisian art group Arts incohérents (1882–1895), who was bestowed with an absurdist and pre-Surrealist talent. Whereas the Lumière brothers were able get audiences out of their seats as they witnessed a train moving towards them in 1895, Fantasmagorie is a supernatural experience, akin to an apparition yet also innocuous and entertaining — the inanimate comes to life out of nothing and figures seemingly move with little sense. From the outset, animation was related to caricature, fabulation and the comical, a sweet spot for the dreams of the youngest audience.    

From the discovery of new imagery arising from the animated line to knowledge of the world through a screen, Cien niños esperando un tren (1988), by Chilean director Ignacio Agüero (Santiago, 1952), narrates a group of young people’s discovery of cinema in a workshop on the origins of the medium in a poverty-stricken town on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. Play, fun and learning combine with a fascination with images, as viewing Émile Cohl’s Fantasmagorie (1908) in the workshop becomes an act of freedom. 

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Programme

Organised by

Museo Reina Sofía

Accessible activity
This activity has two spaces reserved for people with reduced mobility

Agenda

domingo 07 jun 2026 a las 12:00

First session

Émile Cohl. Fantasmagorie
France, 1908, DCP, black and white, silent short film with music, 1’45’’

The first moving drawing in the history of animation. Through the continuity of frames, the main character, a small clown, encounters objects that magically transform. 

Ignacio Agüero. Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train)
Chile,1988, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 55’

Alicia Vega, a teacher, runs a film workshop in a primary school in the impoverished town of Lo Hermida, on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. In the workshop young people encounter cinema in its earliest expression with the screening of the first animation story, Fantasmagorie, an essential work that shows the power of cinema to create knowledge, memory and identity. 

domingo 14 jun 2026 a las 12:00

Second session

Émile Cohl. Fantasmagorie
France, 1908, DCP, black and white, silent short film with music, 1’45’’

Ignacio Agüero. Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train)
Chile,1988, DCP, colour, sound, original version in Spanish, 55’

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Ignacio Agüero, Cien niños esperando un tren (One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train), 1988, film
Émile Cohl, Fantasmagorie, 1908, film
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Activity within the program...

Moon Projector

Moon Projector is the Museo Reina Sofía’s regular film programme for young audiences. Every Sunday morning, sessions are held to introduce children to cinema and audiovisual arts, taking them on a journey of fascination, where imagination and knowledge abound, from the dawn of film language to today’s most creative and original works with future generations in mind. 

The programme title draws from the work of poet Federico García Lorca, a Moon Projector where dreams and early imagination reverberate, and where children’s fantasy emerges from the contemplation of projected light.  

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