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Universal City Studios LLC, doing business as Universal Pictures (also known as Universal Studios or simply Universal) is an American film production and distribution company headquartered at the Universal Studios complex in Universal City, California, and is the flagship studio of Universal Studios, the film studio arm of NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast.
This is a list of films produced or distributed by Universal Pictures in 1920–1929, 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 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
The world's first film poster (to date), for 1895's L'Arroseur arrosé, by the Lumière brothers Rudolph Valentino in Blood and Sand, 1922. The first poster for a specific film, rather than a "magic lantern show", was based on an illustration by Marcellin Auzolle to promote the showing of the Lumiere Brothers film L'Arroseur arrosé at the Grand Café in Paris on December 26, 1895.
At around 5,000 feet it was one of the longest films to be released to date, [7] [10] [11] although the Kinemacolor documentary With Our King and Queen Through India released in February 1912 ran to 16,000 feet; [12] and another religious film The Miracle (the first full-colour feature film) - was released in the UK at 7,000 feet in December ...
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
Poster for the American drama film Our New Minister (1913) with Joseph Conyers, Tom Moore, and Alice Joyce. Gene Gauntier and Jack J. Clark on location in Ireland in You Remember Ellen (1912) The Kalem Company was an early American film studio founded in New York City in 1907. It was one of the first companies to make films abroad and to set up ...
The picture by December 1912 was being successfully marketed in Germany under the title Der Todesritt bei Balaklava ("The Death Ride at Balaklava"). [21] In Bombay (now Mumbai), The Times of India in its January 25, 1913, issue declares the Edison motion picture "magnificent" and ranks it as "one of the best war-films yet given to the public."