The handful of Turks come in from the desert and walk past a British 4.5-inch howitzer. Camels and wagons carry other prisoners across a river. A large group of the prisoners is collected together.Nur...
The open carriage with the King and Queen leaves the Mansion House with a military escort. The King is in Army uniform. The coach drives to the steps of Saint Paul's Cathedral where an honour guard pr...
There is a large crowd with a number of policemen, milling about and uncertain. The captions say they are ignoring pacifist speeches, but this is not obvious.US Navy sailors enter one horse-drawn char...
A pan over the city from across the river, followed by close-ups of the cathedral showing shell damage. According to the caption the cathedral was "spitefully shelled" by the Germans after their "defe...
The Prince is met at Dover harbour by Prince Arthur of Connaught. The two men walk down the gangplank of Prince Yorihito's ship together and salute the flags of their nations. Next, a brief, indistinc...
The film starts with a scene meant to be of the mole at Zeebrugge in 1914 (in fact showing a British Caledon Class cruiser in 1917 or 1918 at another location). The mole after the British occupation o...
The captions state that the men were attacked and set adrift by a U-boat. A pan over a posed group of the men, now back on shore in a small harbour. Some of them board the small fishing boat N232, rid...
The film starts with a declaration that the war was forced upon Britain by "Germany's sinister designs". It shows John French reviewing troops (possibly as Viceroy in Ireland in 1918, but intended as ...
Dita Parlo, Gustav Fröhlich
Still from "Die einsame Insel"
Fritz Huf
Arthur Ehrens, Paul Wegener (from left to right)
Still from "Die Statue"
Luis Trenker
Szene aus "Der rote Baron"
Henny Porten, Lupu Pick
C.Z.K.. „Presseschau.“ Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie III, 3/4 (1913/1914): 89-90. Der Autor zitiert mehrere Pressestimmen, die den kulturellen Wert des Films herv...
News of the exhibition in Lisbon of a group of “war films” in a tribute to the allied nations.
FILMEN is the most important Danish film industry magazine from the early silent film period. The journal was published in the period 1912-1919 (with 24 issues per year).
Lynx. „Kritik.“ Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie III, 3/4 (1913/1914): 80-84. Erläutert die Absicht, künftig in der Zeitschrift Filmkritiken zu veröffentlichen so...
Rennert, Malwine. "Kino und Bühne. Von Willi Rath." Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie III,2 (1913/1914): 46-47. Rennert lobt die neu erschienene Broschüre, stellt aber ...
Thielemann, Walter: „Kinematographie und Alkoholbekämpfung.“ Der Kinematograph, 391 (1914). Bericht darüber, dass das Kino dem Alkoholismus entgegenwirke.
O. Verf.. „Kinokommission des Westfälischen Landgemeindetages.“ Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie III, 5 (1913/1914): 108-111. Bericht über die Arbeit der Kinokommi...
Wie steht das Volk zum Kino ?, Das Lichtbildtheater, 6.Jg, Nr.5, (1914). Bericht über die erste soziologische Untersuchung des Kinowesens durch Emilie Altenloth. Ihrem Ergebniss, dass maßgeblich Men...