Cook & Rilly's Trained Rooster 1905
An early sound-synchronized short of a rooster crowing.
An early sound-synchronized short of a rooster crowing.
Felix Mayol performs a song, in colour.
Polin performs a song.
Armand Dranem performs The True Jiu-Jitsu ("Le Vrai Jiu-Jitsu", by P. Briollet & G. Fabri / C. D'Orviet) in this phonoscene by Alice Guy. This early form of music video was created using a chronophone recording of Dranem, who was then filmed "lip singing". Guy would film phonoscenes of all three major Belle Époque celebrities in France: Polin, Félix Mayol, and Dranem.
A trick film using the reverse effect.
Starring 'Les Omers' as a bunch of bricklayers causing trouble for the local cops.
A magician transforms a tiny dinner table into a full meal for a homeless man.
A traveler at an inn is harassed by a mischievous devil in his room.
Saharet performs the bolero for Alice Guy.
An elephantine spectacle, likely part of the celebrations for the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales to India.
A living statue causes trouble for unsuspecting bystanders.
Cute one-trick doggie show. The backdrop is beautifully detailed, yet the illusion of depth is humorously broken by the balloon bouncing off the set.
Jones is on his way home, carrying a roll of money, when he meets a neighbor who is a notorious miser. The neighbor unexpectedly invites Jones to dinner, and serves him a large meal with plenty of wine. After dinner, the neighbor suggests a way of passing the time - and soon his real intentions become clear.
The film recreates the final events leading to Italian unification in September 1870.
A young woman receives a message, and hurriedly leaves home. But the message was a trick to lure her into a trap, where she is assaulted and killed. When her body is found floating in the river, it is brought to her father. Once he realizes what has been done to his daughter, the father immediately sets out in an effort to extract vengeance.
A bullfighter dances with a woman.
The camera platform was on the front of a New York subway train following another train on the same track. Lighting is provided by a specially constructed work car on a parallel track. At the time of filming, the subway was only seven months old, having opened on October 27, 1904. The ride begins at 14th Street (Union Square) following the route of today's east side IRT, and ends at the old Grand Central Station, built by Cornelius Vanderbuilt in 1869. The Grand Central Station in use today was not completed until 1913.
In this parody of 1903's "Great Train Robbery", also made by Edwin S. Porter, young bandits rob the passengers of a kiddie train and are chased by police officers.
Felix Mayol performs Théodore Botrel's 'Lilas-blanc'.