Travelogue in color.
Cinematic Era: 1912 Vintage
1634 Matches Found
- 0.0 1912 • Cinematic
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A stolen mummy's ring brings death to all who acquire it until it is returned to its owner.
The Vengeance of Egypt
10.0 1912 • Cinematic -
Blooming flowers
The Bud, the Leaf and the Flower
1.0 1912 • Cinematic -
A man's engagement is broken up after an argument with his soon-to-be father-in-law about the suffrage. Later he is tricked into getting engaged with another woman and they end up in court where he finds his former fiancée to be a jury member.
Suffrage and the Man
10.0 1912 • Cinematic -
A romance between Mr. Wall and the girl from the laundry, who encounter each other for the first time on a train station platform.
It All Came Out in the Wash
5.5 1912 • Cinematic -
Italian short comedy from the Itala Film company.
For the Honor of the Muffler
4.0 1912 • Cinematic -
A Italian comedy short film.
I bottoni delle bretelle
4.0 1912 • Cinematic -
A short Western. An Indian is rescued and cared for by the son of the cowboy, who was once robbed by the father of the Indian. Out of guilt, the Indian leaves behind the gold he has stolen, for his saviour.
White Cloud's Secret
4.0 1912 • Cinematic -
Directed by M De Lagarne. The first film produced in Egypt.
The Streets of Alexandria
0.0 1912 • Cinematic -
To be able to have a girl's hand Kelly asks to be asks to be drafted in troops in Libya.
Cocciutelli in War
4.0 1912 • Cinematic -
A propaganda film showing the U.S. Navy doing target practicing.
Target Practice of Atlantic Fleet, U.S. Navy
0.0 1912 • Cinematic -
Views of the city of Tripoli and its characteristic streets. The film corresponds to the description given by The Bioscope on 11 January 1912. Unlike other documentaries on the city of Tripoli produced by Cines in the same years (including, for example, Tripoli italiana), Vita tripolina ha been distributed in the UK, Spain and Austria.
The Life of Tripoli
0.0 1912 • Cinematic -
A poor woman, with no money for Christmas presents, tucks her three children in for the night, on Christmas Eve. Later, a poor, old beggar comes to her door and she lets him in to rest and warm up. When he suddenly leaves, she follows him to the front door of a church, where she finds an abandoned baby. The woman takes the baby home to care for it, even though she has almost nothing. Her acts of kindness are repaid with a Christmas miracle.
The Christmas Miracle
5.4 1912 • Cinematic -
The Strong Arm Squad of the Future originated within the early newsreel The Mutual Weekly and survives only as an undated fragment. "This grim little cartoon comments on the present by foretelling a future under gender-inverted militias—which take power thanks to the punch line: “VOTES FOR WOMEN.” —Scott Simmon
The Strong Arm Squad of the Future
4.5 1912 • Cinematic