1911-1920

  • Enrico Guazzoni – Agrippina (1911)

    1911-1920Enrico GuazzoniEpicItalySilent

    Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    It’s another one of Guazzoni’s ancient dramas, this time about Agrippina, the mother of Nero. After she manages to make him emperor of Rome, he finds her a nuisance.
    Sadly she is immune to poison and sinking her ship didn’t kill her either – she simply swam ashore. In the end a sword through her stomach did the trick: Few people are immune to that.
    Actually not all of the above features in the film… Basically Nero’s just cross because mamma doesn’t like his new mistress. Read More »

  • ? – Die Kanzlei (1920)

    ?1911-1920GermanySilentWeimar Republic cinema

    Film restored by Filmoteca de la Generalitat Valenciana (Spain)

    At a chancery a lawyer helps his female customers, predominantly with his member. Watch how even back in silent-movie times girls expressed themselves freely on camera. By the way, back in those days, women with ‘Rubens’ figures were considered beauty-queens, but the sex was similar to what’s happening today! There’s merry threesomes, lesbian games and a priest off the straight and narrow! Porn-fodder of the rare kind: A movie from 1920!Read More »

  • D.W. Griffith – Intolerance: Love’s Struggle Throughout the Ages (2007 Restoration) (1916)

    1911-1920ClassicsD.W. GriffithSilentUSA

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Filmreference review
    “Critical judgment remains sharply divided on Intolerance, D. W. Griffith’s most expensive and flamboyant spectacle. Those critics who pronounce the film a failure generally point to the four stories, which, they claim, are thematically too diverse to be effectively collated. Taking their cue from Eisenstein’s famous indictment, they argue that the film suffers from purposeless fragmentation and thematic incoherence. Others, notably Vachel Lindsay, Georges Sadoul, Edward Wagenknecht, and more recently Pauline Kael, list Intolerance among the masterworks, stressing its formal complexity, experimental daring, and thematic richness. René Clair, taking a middle position, writes, “it combines extraordinary lyric passages, realism, and psychological detail, with nonsense, vulgarity, and painful sentimentality.”Read More »

  • D.W. Griffith – Broken Blossoms or The Yellow Man and the Girl (1919)

    1911-1920D.W. GriffithDramaSilentUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Don Druker, Chicago Reader wrote:
    One of D.W. Griffith’s most beautiful films, a 1919 tale of the chaste love of a Chinese man (Richard Barthelmess) for the frail daughter (Lillian Gish) of a loutish boxer. It perfectly fuses all the elements of Griffith’s style: tender drama played off against scenes of violence; a rich, operatic sense of character and emotion; and a dreamlike acting style, given particular force by the subtlety of Gish’s performance and the strength of Barthelmess’s.Read More »

  • Ernst Lubitsch – Kohlhiesels Töchter AKA Kohlhiesel’s Daughters (1920)

    Comedy1911-1920Ernst LubitschGermanySilent

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Somewhere in Southern Bavaria Xaver wants to marry Gretel, but her father Kohlhiesel wants his elder daughter Liesel to marry first. The problem is, nobody wants to marry her, because she’s too brutal. Seppel suggests, that he should marry Liesel first, get rid of her and then he can marry Gretel…Read More »

  • Henrik Galeen & Paul Wegener – Der Golem AKA The Golem [Fragment] (1915)

    1911-1920GermanyHenrik Galeen and Paul WegenerSilent

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    In Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv, 108 meter fragments of Der Golem (1914) are preserved. (Original length is 1250 meter.) Among those fragments, 97 meter parts are restored in this DVD. Act 1 scene 39, and somewhere of Act 4 which includes intertitle #32 and #33, with newly created opening title.Read More »

  • Enrico Guazzoni – Agrippina (1911)

    1911-1920Enrico GuazzoniEpicItalySilent


    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Summary:
    After the death of Claudius, Agrippina announced Nero the heir to the throne, which leads to despair of the true heir – Brittanicus.
    Not daring to oppose Agrippina, Senators declare Nero the emperor.
    Agrippina is against of an affair of Nero and Poppaea.
    Agrippina threaten Nero that if he neglect his wife Octavius, she will give the throne to Brittanicus.
    The threats of Agrippina had their effect. Brittanicus is poisoned.
    Perversity of Nero is insatiable and he gives his trusted man, Anicetus a terrible order.
    Agrippina is looking for salvation, but the indomitable hatred of Emperor Nero decides the fate of Agrippina…Read More »

  • ? – The Kinematograph Year Book (1914)

    ?1911-1920BooksUnited Kingdom

    “Perhaps the earliest single source which tried to bring together information on the film industry is The Kinematograph Year Book, Program Diary and Directory for 1914.

    The directory gives an overview of the previous year (1913) and contains a wide range of articles and information. Also present are many advertisements, not only for films and film companies but also suppliers and service providers. It also contains a directory of all cinemas in the UK at the time.”

    contents:

    A Retrospect Of The Year
    Kinematograph Finance in 1913
    Survey of the Year’s Technical Progress
    Important Film Subjects of the Year
    Picture Theatre Music during 1913
    The Law and the Kinematograph
    Interesting Social Functions
    New Theatres Opened in 1913
    New Companies Registered in 1913
    Review of Decisions made under the
    Cinematograph Act 1909
    Important Law Cases of the Year
    Personalities
    Pictorial Reminiscences extending
    over 40 years – 1873-1914
    Exhibitions during 1913
    Trade Associations
    Useful Tables and RecipesRead More »

  • Amleto Palermi – Carnevalesca (1918)

    1911-1920Amleto PalermiArthouseItalySilent

    http://img403.imageshack.us/img403/8171/22018730203ed0aaa608.jpg

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Carnevalesca with the beautiful Lydia Borelli is divided in to 4 parts, the white carnival, the innocent and pure childhood, the blue carnival love & youth, the red carnival the violent and destructive passion, the black carnival, death and madness.Read More »

Back to top button