The film shows sailors carrying stretchers with survivors from the sinking through the streets of an Irish village. The formal funeral of those who drowned in the sinking, also in Ireland. A close-up ...
I. Newsreel item on Sir Edward Kemp, Canada's Minister of Militia, working at his desk and in profile against a window, January 1918. II. Newsreel item on US Ambassador Walter Page opening a YMCA for ...
The first fire is in London, "Britain's largest timberyard" burning. The second fire is an asphalt works in New Jersey, with oil tanks and barrels ablaze. The third conflagration is at "Saint Margret'...
The women work in a hangar assembling the aircraft. Some of the women are in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps. They make the wooden frames for the aircraft wings, then attach the fabric. A group of th...
Spanish language version of a newsreel item on British horsed transport detouring round the dry Wadi Hersi, north of Gaza, since the retreating Turks have blown the bridge, Palestine, November 1917.
A German 150mm gun is towed into a wood east of Ribecourt on the Marcoing road by a Mark IV female tank HMLS 'Intimidate' (of 'I' Company, Tank Corps ?) and met by men of the Royal Artillery and (prob...
Asquith has his back to the camera throughout. He is first shown talking with British officers near Contay, then at the Royal Flying Corps base at Fienvillers watching a Sopwith 1-1/2 Strutter of 70 S...
The film opens with views of two sets of ruins, one with children playing. This is followed by close-ups, probably in both Babylon and Ctesiphon, of "carvings, depicting biblical incidents, hewn out o...
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...