Jack, a kidnapped boy working as a chimney sweep, is roughly treated and often beaten by his brutal employer. Falling asleep after a long day, he dreams of his lost mother and the fairy tales he heard. The memories transform into a journey through Dream Country, led by the Fairy of Dreams, who turns Jack into a King amid the celebrations of a royal court. The dream ends abruptly when Jack is woken up by his employer for the day's work. Jack is busily at work when, behind some bricks inside a chimney, he comes across a box full of gold and money, hidden there many years ago. The employer tries to take possession of the treasure trove, but Jack runs away. A chase ensues through the neighborhood, with townspeople and servants joining in. Jack escapes and hides just before his employer falls into a pit. Finding him covered with mud, the onlookers plunge him into a cask of water. By good luck, Jack manages to come across his family, and is welcomed back. Surrounded by riches, he forgives his former employer.
Production
From 1905 onward, films by the Pathé Frères studios gained sweeping popularity at fairground cinemas and other venues. Méliès attempted to respond to this popularity by imitating their style. Thus, The Chimney Sweep is a bricolage, combining Méliès's sense of fantasy with the dramatic, realist tone of popular Pathé films, possibly with a young audience in mind. The chase at the end of the film also suggests Méliès's attempts to keep up with the times, as chase films had become a popular trend. Méliès appears in the film as one of two men who join the chase scene together; Emile Gajean is the other. The ballet in the film is performed by the corps de ballet of the Théâtre du Châtelet, and was choreographed by Madame Stitchel, their director. Stitchel also choreographed dances for other Méliès films, including Under the Seas. The Ping-Pongs, an English company of dancing girls, played the Troops of Dream Country. Unusually for Méliès, the chase scenes were filmed outdoors: each of these exterior scenes was staged on a different part of Méliès's own property in Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis. Special effects in the film were created using stage machinery, substitution splices, superimpositions, and dissolves.
Release
The film was released by Méliès's Star Film Company and is numbered 791–806 in its catalogs. In French catalogs, it was advertised as a conte bleu fantastique en 25 tableaux; in English-language catalogs, as "an extravagant :wikt:cock-and-bull story|'cock and bull' story in 25 scenes." The English-language catalog writeup for the film also highlighted its comic chase scene, saying that The Chimney Sweep included "Comedy—Mystery—Sensational Adventures—Pathos—Acrobatics—Spectacular Effects and A GREAT BIG CHASE." The film was registered for copyright at the Library of Congress on 17 February 1906, and showings of it were first advertised in the Phono-Ciné-Gazette on 1 March of the same year. It was offered to exhibitors in both black-and-white and hand-colored prints. A fragment of the film survives; the rest is presumed lost.