In Havana, Cuba, 6,000 factory hands thrown out of work by the effect of the war on trade protest outside the Congress. In Lisbon the Portuguese send troops, shown leaving by ship, to Angola (Portugue...
The American cinematographer Albert K Dawson and a civilian wander through the woods, which show damage after the battle.
Brief film of the woods near Przemysl after the Russian retreat, Eastern...
Columns of Serbian troops, led by their decorative regimental standards, march in full kit out to the harbour and onto their troopships.
Newsreel item of Serbian forces boarding troopships in Alb...
I. Sopwith 1-1/2 Strutters taking off and landing on HMS Argus, 1919 (?). Medium shot pan across a group of pilots standing before the chart house of HMS Argus. Medium close-up as lift brings up a Sop...
The jumbled film consists of unrelated, very brief items. Some of these appear in other films but the majority are probably unique.
Mixed and confused material, some of it unique, of the Western ...
Unrelated scenes with no continuity or storyline, mainly taken from the GERMAN OFFENSIVE series of Spring 1918, showing the British sector of the Western Front between March and April 1918. An additio...
An actress "Britannia" draws aside a curtain over a screen, flanked by silhouettes of two British soldiers. On the screen appears a genuine scene of refugees fleeing out of Belgium in 1914, followed b...
Helene Grass, Stephan Szász in "3/4" (2012/13)
Helene Grass in "3/4" (2012/13)
Helene Grass, Stephan Szász in "3/4" (2012/13)
German movie poster of "3/4" (2012/13)
Maike Mia Höhne on the set of "3/4" (2012/13)
Stephan Szász, Helene Grass in "3/4" (2012/13)
Helene Grass in "3/4" (2012/13)
Helene Grass in "3/4" (2012/13)
The film was permitted to young people under 16 years.
FILMEN is the most important Danish film magazine from the early silent film period. The journal was published in the period 1912-1919 (with 24 issues per year)
FILMEN is the most important Danish film magazine from the early silent film period. The journal was published in the period 1912-1919 (with 24 issues per year)