The general area of Ypres. Filmed from just outside the town itself, shells falling on buildings on the outskirts. Two Mark V tanks, one Male, one Female, both carrying soldiers, move over open countr...
The town is shown from a distance, then in close-up. The suburbs are burnt out and deserted. The main square is relatively undamaged. The collegiate church and the Church of Saint Martin show consider...
The canals running through the town are undamaged but the main girder bridge has been brought down. British soldiers of II Corps wait in the main square.Civilians watch while the British, of 40th Divi...
The map, in stop-frame action, shows the German invasion of France and Belgium in 1914, followed by a more detailed version of the Allied advance to victory between July and November 1918. The Allied ...
The body of Marshal Foch lies in state at the Invalides. King Albert of Belgium and then a crowd of people file past to pay their last respects. For the procession the streets are lined with soldiers....
(Reel 1) It is 1914 and the outbreak of the war. Mr Smith, a prosperous businessman, is starting to lose staff who have volunteered for the Army and he refuses women replacements. He also prevents his...
Medium shot of Thornycroft V Class destroyer steaming at speed. Medium long shot off port quarter of two battleships - the nearest is HMS Canada preceded by an Iron Duke flying a kite balloon. Long sh...
(Reel 1) Opening pan across fleet anchorage (note HMS Neptune). The King is seen onboard a succession of battleships, watching marchpasts of the crews - HMS Queen Elizabeth (Colossus Class in backgrou...
Alice Verden
Still from "Störe nicht die Flitterwochen"
Szene aus "Das Geheimnis des Ingenieurs Branting"
Lyda Salmonova
Still from "Paragraph 80, Absatz II"
Still with Alice Verden, Erich Ponto (both on the left)
Still with Alexander von Antalffy (on the left)
G.W. Pabst (Mitte), André Saint-Germain (rechts) (Dreharbeiten)
Stern-Film, Alkohol, Lichtbildbühne, 49, (1918), S. 69.
O. Verf.. „Der Mangel an Aktualitäten.“ Der Kinematograph 400 (1914): 3-4. Artikel, der den Mangel an aktuellen Aufnahmen aus dem Krieg beklagt. Der Krieg sei die richtige Gelegenheit für die Pr...
Elster, Alexander. "Kinogewerbe und Kinokunst." Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie III,7 (1913/1914): 172-173. Die wirtschaftliche Lage des Kinogewerbes verhindere eine kÃ...
Die Verfilmung von Königlichen Lazarettbesuchen in der "Eiko-Woche", Der Kinematograph, 441, (1915), S. 10. Bericht über die Absicht de Eiko-Woche, nicht nur Kämpfe zu filmen, sondern auch das mili...
Das neue Filmzensurgesetz, Der Kinematograph, 692/93, (1920), S. 15-17. Bericht über das am 15.4.1920 erlassene Filmzensurgesetz. Das Erlassen des Gesetzes bedeute einen schwarzen Tag für die deutsc...
Englische Beobachtungen im Berliner Kino, Der Kinematograph, 421, (1915), S. 27. Bericht, der aus der Londoner "Daily Mail" zitiert wird und die Eindrücke eines englischen Reporters von einer Wochens...