Men of 332nd Infantry Regiment, detached from 83rd (Ohio) Division, being led by Italian soldiers into the second line of a trench system and going on to occupy a front line. Some of the Americans dis...
The commander of 26th (Yankee) Division, Major-General Clarence R Edwards, stands with Lieutenant-Colonel C M Dowell before their dugout entrance at Bras. Nearby horses of 101st Field Artillery of the...
I. Events on 23rd October. Captain J B Luckie leads 'G' Company, 313rd Infantry Regiment, 79th (Liberty) Division, over the top in a training exercise in the region of Combres. The town of Cambrai aft...
Watering horses of 1st Field Artillery Brigade in the Forêt de la Reine, just north of Boucq, with considerable military traffic congestion. Men of 18th Infantry Regiment advancing in 'artillery form...
Secretary of State for War Newton D Baker visits American troops hospitalised at Romsey in England. The rest of the film is of France. An American Infantry band plays in a damaged barn in the Argonne....
I. The film starts with US and French troops parading through the Place d'Jena and the Avenue du Président Wilson in Paris on 4th July, followed by French troops clearing up bomb damage after a Germa...
Troops repairing bridges throw rocks to splash the camera. Varennes (where, in July, 3rd Division earned the title 'Marne') showing extensive damage. An American discovering a German booby trap (acted...
A temporary British cemetery in France, possibly Thelus. The camera closes in to a cross marked "A British Soldier". Then the coffin of the Unknown Warrior being carried to the quay at Boulogne by sen...
Alice Verden, Erich Ponto
Paul Wegener, Lyda Salmonova
Screenshot from "Guerre 1914-1915. Le General Joffre en Alsace"
Still from "Der Graf von Cagliostro"
Screenshot from "Mit L.35 über Berlin und Potsdam"
Paul Hartmann, Adolf Klein (from left to right)
Ossi Oswalda, Julius Dewald
Film poster
Dehnow, Fritz: „Zensur und Sittlichkeit“ Der Kinematograph 382 (1914). Die Mängel der Zensur lägen nicht in den Gesetzen, sondern in deren Anwendung. Die Zensur sei aber notwendig, um die öffen...
Horst Emscher, Der Film im Dienste der Politik, Der Kinematograph, 410, (1914), S. 15-16. Der Autor hebt hervor, dass die Kriegsführung auf publizistischer Ebene, mit der die Meinung des Auslands bee...
Edgar Költsch, Die Vorteile durch den Krieg für das Kinotheater, Der Kinematograph, 407, (1914), S. 11-12. Auch wenn es nicht so aussehe, habe das Kino durch den Krieg einen Aufschwung erlebt. Insbe...