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Set in the bleak aftermath and devastation of the World War I, a recently demobbed soldier, Timosh, returns to his hometown Kiev, after having survived a train wreck. His arrival coincides with a national celebration of Ukrainian freedom, but the festivities are not to last as a disenchanted.Read More »
Silent
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Aleksandr Dovzhenko – Arsenal [1972 Edit] (1929)
1921-1930Aleksandr DovzhenkoAmos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtDramaUSSRWar -
John Ford – The Last Outlaw (1919)
1911-1920John FordSilentUSAWestern -
Edward Sedgwick & Buster Keaton – The Cameraman [4K Restoration] (1928)
1921-1930Buster KeatonComedyEdward SedgwickSilentUSAQuote:
Hopelessly in love with a woman working at MGM Studios, a clumsy man attempts to become a motion picture cameraman to be close to the object of his desire.Read More » -
Gerhard Lamprecht – Am Fusse des Aetna (1927)
1921-1930DocumentaryGerhard LamprechtGermanySilentWeimar Republic cinemaA short silent documentary by Gerhard Lamprecht in which the director documented the most beautiful moments of his four week vacation to Sicily, Italy.Read More »
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John Ford – The Village Blacksmith (1922)
1921-1930DramaJohn FordSilentUSAThis was Ford’s 46th film in 5 years. The film seems to be overly melodramatic, a young man in a wheelchair drags himself (in pouring rain) to the house of the man who stole money from the church donation drive. There’s also a woman walking through the rain who gets struck by lightning, a whipping, a fist fight or two, a wedding, an operation?Read More »
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Lev Kuleshov – Proekt inzhenera Prayta AKA The Project of Engineer Prite (1918)
1911-1920ExperimentalLev KuleshovRussiaSilentA young and dynamic engineer, Mack Prite, whose talents have helped him rise above humble origins, struggles against an old entrenched capitalist whose oil company’s profits are threatened when Prite develops a plan to turn peat into usable energy.Read More »
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Anh Hung Tran – La femme mariée de Nam Xuong (1989)
1981-1990Anh Hung TranAsianShort FilmVietnamQuote:
this one was the mandatory project every cinema student has to make at the end of his studies. Also based on a vietnamese tale , image seems to be transfered from a videotape, not fantastic quality, but I presume you’ll never see it in better form…
Anyway, it’s also the first apparition of the incredibly beautiful Yen-Khe Luguern …a few years before she married Tran Anh Hung… that’s enough for meRead More » -
D.W. Griffith – Isn’t Life Wonderful (1924)
Drama1921-1930D.W. GriffithSilentUSAProducer/director D.W. Griffith’s feature is a fairly realistic study of the deprivations visited on the German people after their defeat in World War I. In her best-ever performance, Griffith protégée Carol Dempster plays Inga, who does her best to hold her family together and keep food on the table despite grinding poverty, debilitating illness and out-of-control inflation. The most memorable scene finds Inga desperately trying to maneuver a basketful of near-worthless Deutschmarks to a market before the prices rise again and she is unable to buy meat. Aware that anti-German sentiment still prevailed in the US, Griffith cannily inserted an opening title which noted that the main characters were Polish.Read More »
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Cecil M. Hepworth – Baby’s Toilet (1905)
1901-1910Cecil M. HepworthDocumentaryShort FilmUnited KingdomQuote
Baby’s Toilet is a 1905 British short film directed by Cecil Hepworth. The film features Hepworth’s baby daughter Elizabeth being bathed and dressed by her nurse, and was categorised by Hepworth as a “Domestic Scene”. In the film Hepworth combines a series of shots to produce a narrative depicting the bathing process from beginning to end. He would later acknowledge the influence of the pioneering work of the Lumière brothers on this and other similar films he produced in the 1900s. The print of Baby’s Toilet survives, and Patrick Russell of the British Film Institute observes: “Long after Elizabeth Hepworth’s own death, the affecting innocence of infancy remains a basic human theme. Baby’s Toilet has lost none of its charm.Read More »









