The men sit at a table in the open air, using a loading machine attached to the table to fill the cloth belts.A heavy gun fires, completely concealed by a tent with only its barrel showing, but possib...
In Trafalgar Square a big placard has been placed across the plinth of Nelson's Column, reading "England Expects This Day That Every Man Will Do His Duty". People crowd the square. Around the plinth a...
Troops train with the gas-hood, which fits rucked up around the cap like a cap-band. The men crouch behind a barricade of logs. Smoke, representing gas, drifts over them and they pull down the hoods. ...
Sarrail, with an escort of lancers in parade dress, rides past a guard of French soldiers and through an improvised arch ("arc de triomphe"), half-silhouetted against the sea. Sarrail arrives at Lembe...
The film describes the prisoners as the "result of the great French victory in Champagne". They are led into a large cultivated area, standing in 'blocks' of a few hundred men. Dragoons, apparently in...
The men of the division march past Lloyd George and Hughes (who is in uniform). Prominent is the division's kilted regiment, 72nd (Seaforth Highlanders of Canada) Battalion. Lloyd George delivers a sp...
The film's scenes are out of sequence and its title appears nearly half-way through. As it stands, it opens with soldiers filling sandbags and digging a trench line. Scottish troops on the march with ...
Students from Charing Cross Hospital are taken by an open-topped bus to Richmond Rugby Football Club grounds, where, most of them in fancy dress, they hold a mock rugby match, 'fighting' for a small f...
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...
Kritik aus Breslauer Zeitung (15.07.1917) zu Der Golem und die Tänzerin.
Monopolfilm-Vertriebs-GmbH..“Patriotisches Kriegs-Programm.“ Der Kinematograph 399 (1914): 5. Werbung für das aktuelle Filmprogramm der Monopolfilm GmbH.
Der Krieg auf der Ranch !, Der Kinematograph, 701 /02, (1920). Werbung für einen Western.
Das Wichtigste der Woche, Der Kinematograph, 670, (1919), S. 25-26. Seit dem 2.11.1919 gebe es in Berlin eine freiwillige Filmzensur. Die USPD habe im Reichstag den Antrag gemacht, die Kinos zu versta...