Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Plague-Stricken City (French/ Gaumont) the filmmakers tried to emulate the 1912 Italian silent film Masque of the Red Death herein, which in turn was based on the famous story by Edgar Allan Poe [64] Please Help the Pore
Title Director Cast Genre Notes The Musketeers of Pig Alley: D. W. Griffith: Elmer Booth, Lillian Gish Drama: A New Cure for Divorce: William Garwood, Mignon Anderson
List of Universal Pictures films (1912–1919) List of Universal Pictures films (1920–1929) List of Universal Pictures films (1930–1939) List of Universal Pictures films (1940–1949) List of Universal Pictures films (1950–1959) List of Universal Pictures films (1960–1969) List of Universal Pictures films (1970–1979)
This is a list of films produced or distributed by Universal Pictures in 1912–1919, founded in 1912 as the Universal Film Manufacturing Company. It is the main motion picture production and distribution arm of Universal Studios, a subsidiary of the NBCUniversal division of Comcast.
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 Girl Next Door; Lorna Doone (1912 film) The Love Tyrant; Lucrezia Borgia (1912 film ...
Martin Scorsese's Film Foundation claimed in 2017 that "half of all American films made before 1950 and over 90% of films made before 1929 are lost forever". [4] Deutsche Kinemathek estimates that 80–90% of silent films are gone; [5] the film archive's own list contains over 3,500 lost films.
Poster for Ivanhoe (1913) Used from 1919 to 1923. The Universal Film Manufacturing Company was incorporated in New York City on April 30, 1912. [13] Laemmle, who emerged as president in July 1912, was the primary figure in the partnership with Dintenfass, Baumann, Kessel, Powers, Swanson, Horsley, and Brulatour.
The film was made in the summer and autumn of 1912. [3] Méliès himself plays the Prince's messenger who searches for the owner of the glass slipper. [4] His daughter, Georgette Méliès, was likely one of the two camera operators (each of Méliès's films from 1902 onward was shot with two cameras simultaneously for international distribution ...