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The Female of the Species, directed by D. W. Griffith, starring Mary Pickford; The Fickle Spaniard, directed by Mack Sennett, starring Mabel Normand; For His Son, directed by D. W. Griffith, starring Blanche Sweet
File:A Horrible Way to Die (movie poster).jpg; File:A Kid Like Jake.png; File:A Kind of Loving (1962) film poster.jpg; File:A Kind of Murder (film) poster.jpg; File:A Lady Without Passport movie poster.jpg; File:A Ladys Morals.jpg; File:A Landscape of Lies.jpg; File:A Late Quartet Poster.jpg; File:A letter to three wives movie poster.jpg
The new collection of over 200 films was studied by two French film historians who visited the Library in 2003. They made comparisons to the original paper prints and discovered that these "new restorations that the Library of Congress has recently carried out..., unlike Niver’s reconstitutions, are exact copies of the original paper prints."
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
Miss Robinson Crusoe (1912 film) The Laird's Daughter; The Land Beyond the Sunset; The Last Bohemian (1912 film) A Leap for Love; Leaves in the Storm; The Lesser Evil (1912 film) The Lie (1912 film) Life of Villa; The Life Story of John Lee, or The Man They Could Not Hang (1912 film) Like Knights of Old; Little Boy Blue (1912 film) The Little ...
By 1912, major motion-picture companies had set up production near or in Los Angeles. [1] In the early 1900s, most motion picture patents were held by Thomas Edison 's Motion Picture Patents Company in New Jersey, and filmmakers were often sued to stop their productions.
The Film Preservation Board described this two-reel melodrama from 1912, part of which was filmed in a working textile mill, as a "key work" in relation to the U.S. movement for child labor reform in the years before World War I. According to the Film Preservation Board, an "influential critic of the time" called it "the boldest, most timely ...