A collection of fragments of British and Australian aviation film of the First World War period.
Subtitled "The work of the Department of the Director General Voluntary Organisations including the Camps Library". Introductory shot of the Director General Sir Edward Ward seated in his office in Sc...
VICTORY - GOD BLESS THE BRITISH ARMY THAT HAS SAVED OUR HOMES AND OUR ALL!: Stock footage of mortar launcher, bi-plane, and tanks. AND OUR INDOMITABLE SONS OF THE SEA WHO HAVE SAVED US AND OUR ALLIES ...
The assembly groups the films into episodes as follows: (Reel 1) Salonika, the voyage to Egypt, the ceremony of the drums, the aeroplane flight; (Reel 2) the horse show, scenes at a 'cactus patch' loc...
Four reels of very jumbled material, mainly out-of-focus or of poor quality. The first reel is mainly of fragments from the Western Front 1916-1918 taken by British official cameramen, the remainder f...
The film appears to be of the intervention in North Russia, but varies in quality from slightly out of focus to completely blurred.
Blurred and unviewable film of the British intervention in Nort...
The regiments are as follows. The Civil Service Rifles (a battalion of the Royal Fusiliers). The London Scottish (1/14th Battalion, the London Regiment). Pipers of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlander...
Five reels of stockshots of the Western Front, with no apparent theme or linking sequence. The majority of the material for all but the final reel comes from IWM 191 BATTLE OF THE SOMME. The majority ...
First lieutenant Szabó (actor: Evžen Georgij Jevgeněv) in uniform with hat and cigarette.
A group of Austrian soldiers in front of the opened railway car.
Jiří Voldán (actor: Vladimír Ch. Vladimírov) with bandaged head stands in uniform near the barred window.
Karel Kramář on suit with shirt and tie.
A man on a suit and a soldier stand behind bars.
Soldiers in German uniforms stand at the table and drink alcohol from glasses or bottles.
Jiří Voldán (Vladimír Ch. Vladimírov) napadá nadporučíka Szabóa (Evžen Georgij Jevgeněv).
Two policemen hold a woman in black, soldiers are
Der soziale Film, Der Kinematograph, 630, (1919), S. 14. Rezension zu "Mutter Erde" von Johannes Gaulke und Heinrich Ilgenstein.
O. Verf.. „Deutschlands Ein- und Ausfuhr von Kinofilmen im Jahre 1912.“ Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie, III, 9/10 (1913/1914): 236. Wirtschaftsstatistiken aus dem ...
Neuheiten auf dem Berliner Filmmarkte, Der Kinematograph, 418, (1914), S. 27-35.