All Movies From 1901 to 1910
List activity
203 views
• 0 this weekCreate a new list
List your movie, TV & celebrity picks.
245 titles
- Another excellent living statue pose copied from a Greek panel and showing three male figures and one female figure.
- DirectorEugene Py
- D'Artagnan and his musketeer comrades must thwart the plans of Cardinal Richelieu to usurp King Louis XIII's power.
- DirectorHiralal Sen
- This shows an old man coming along happy in his belief that he has a large, fine watermelon; but a crowd of street kids have made up their minds to get the melon, and the picture shows them waiting up an alley for the old man to pass, and when he does the boys rush out and push, with the result that the melon falls to the ground, and then what a sight! Nothing to be seen but the boys, melon and old man chastising them. Fine picture; great hit; absolutely.
- DirectorLucien Nonguet
- A husband walks out on his wife, leaving an incriminating letter behind. She hires a detective, who discovers the husband in a compromising position with another woman.
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorHiralal Sen
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorFrans Engström
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorRicardo de BañosStarsAntonio del PozoEl Mochuelo
- DirectorFiloteo Alberini
- DirectorFrans Engström
- DirectorFerdinand Zecca
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorKnut LambertStarsKnut LambertHelfrid LambertTollie ZellmanA charity soaré in the social lounge. The Swedish King Oscar II attends. A very early Swedish film.
- DirectorCharles TaitStarsElizabeth TaitJohn TaitNicholas BrierleyOriginally 70 minutes in running time, only 17 minutes of the world's first full-length narrative feature film survived in stills and other fragments and tell the story of Ned Kelly, an infamous 19th-century Australian outlaw.
- DirectorArturo Ambrosio
- StarsJoe GansBattling NelsonA championship fight that took place in the Nevada goldfields between boxers Joe Gans and Battling Nelson.
- DirectorArthur GilbertStarsAlbert GaterMarie GreyJames Rouse
- DirectorAlice Guy
- DirectorOvide Decroly
- DirectorOscar Lindelöf
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorArturo Ambrosio
- DirectorViggo Larsen
- Reenactment of the actual fight.
- DirectorFelipe de Jesús HaroStarsFelipe de Jesús Haro
- DirectorAlf CollinsStarsMadame GarrudWomen pursue pickpockets from Piccadilly to Hampstead and wrestle them.
- DirectorArthur GilbertTwenty-two songs from the opera Faust, presented in twenty-two reels, each about three minutes in duration. Images were synchronized with a recorded soundtracks using the Chronophone sound-on-disc system.
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorCharles MacMahonStarsJim GeraldGeorge MerrimanLance Vane
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorArthur Melbourne CooperStarsKate O'Connor
- DirectorCharles Magnusson
- DirectorMario CaseriniStarsFernanda Negri PougetHamlet suspects his uncle has murdered his father to claim the throne of Denmark and the hand of Hamlet's mother, but the prince cannot decide whether or not he should take vengeance.
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorMario Morais
- DirectorBenjamin OliveiraStarsInez GrizetaBenjamin Oliveira
- DirectorSegundo de Chomón
- DirectorFrancis BoggsOtis TurnerStarsL. Frank BaumFrank BurnsGeorge E. WilsonLost film that adapted L. Frank Baum's books "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz", "The Marvelous Land of Oz", "Ozma of Oz" and "John Dough and the Cherub". Only the narration script, read by L. Frank Baum himself, and production stills survive.
- DirectorGiovanni Pastrone
- DirectorNarciso CuyàsA self-proclaimed "knight" and his hapless squire travel the Spanish countryside, attacking "giants" that are really windmills in his attempt to win the love of the fair Dulcinea.
- DirectorNarciso CuyàsStarsJaime BorrásJoaquín Carrasco
- DirectorAntonio Cuesta
- DirectorRené Le SomptierStarsAndré Le SomptierAlice Tissot
- StarsFritzi Massary
- DirectorEdoardo BencivengaStarsFelice Minotti
- DirectorLouis FeuilladeStarsAlice TissotMaurice VinotRenée Carl
- DirectorD.W. GriffithStarsFlorence LawrenceCharles InsleeLinda ArvidsonKate Nelson, a girl miner who has been working a claim in the mountains, runs into the office of the frontier hotel with the tidings that she has at last struck paydirt, showing a bag of valuable nuggets to admiring friends. Having just returned from the appraiser's office, and it being late, she puts up at the hotel for the night. In the office at Kate's arrival there is a Mexican woman who has just lost her money at Faro. At sight of Kate's gold she becomes desperate and at once plans to secure it. Kate is shown to a room, and is soon asleep with the bag of yellow nuggets reposing under her pillow. Suddenly the face of the Mexican woman is seen at the window, and she has little trouble in forcing it open. Her intrusion awakens Kate, but she overpowers her and gains the gold in the struggle. Kate manages to fire her revolver, with a view to bring aid, but all too late, for the thief makes good her escape, leaving behind on the door an incriminating mantilla, which discovers the identity of the culprit. A chase is made after the fugitive, the hotel clerk, friend of Kate's, leading the way. This poor fellow, however, is dropped in his tracks by a bullet from the woman's gun in ambush. Distancing her pursuers, the Mexican woman comes upon an Indian girl, who, with her half-breed husband, are camped alongside the river. The Red Girl bides the Mexican woman and throws the searching posse on the wrong trail. In return for the kindly act on the part of the Red Girl, the Mexican woman plies her wiles on the half-breed husband, not only taking him away, but inducing him to kill his wife. To this end they plan a torture. Binding her hands and feet, they take her to a large trunk of a dead tree, which overhangs the river, and here they hang her, like Tantalus, suspended between water and sky. With her teeth she manages to free one of her hands and with an ornament on her necklace contrives to saw the rope and drop into the water. Swimming to the shore she again meets Kate and her friends, and volunteers to become their guide in running down the miscreants, who have embarked in a canoe and are rapidly paddling down the river. Into another canoe the pursuers leap and are soon shortening the distance between themselves and the scoundrels, until at length they come up with them, and a hand-to-hand conflict ensues, during which both canoes are capsized, and a terrific struggle in the water ends with the overpowering of the pair and arrest of the Mexican Jezebel. The dip in the river has evidently chilled the half-breed's ardor for the Mexican woman, for he tries to return to the Red Girl, but she repulses him, and we leave her and Kate standing on the cliff, enfolded in each other's arms, bathed in the golden rays of a setting sun. Indeed a most beautiful scene.
- DirectorRudolf BiebrachFranz PortenStarsHenny Porten
- DirectorMario CaseriniStarsMaria CaseriniFanny Deslisles
- DirectorEmanuel TvedeStarsHr. AndreasenKate FabianCarl HintzThe plumber Coupeau run into the lovable Gervaise, with knowing that she is the lover of his friend Lantier, Coupeau begin to flirt the girl. The rascal Lantier has recently fallen in love with the beautiful Virginie.
- DirectorGiuseppe de LiguoroStarsGiuseppe de LiguoroCount Ugolino is sent to hell and Dante tells the story of how he deserves his place.
- DirectorHeinrich Bolten-Baeckers
- DirectorTheo FrenkelA man is obsessed by the 'Salome' dance.
- DirectorEugene Py
- DirectorViggo LarsenStarsViking RingheimPetrine SonneAn exhausted bicyclist stops by the pathway and falls asleep. He dreams about an encounter with a witch who magically transforms his clothes and rides off with his bicycle. But when he awakes, the mysterious transformations continue.
- StarsEdith Buemann
- DirectorMauritz BjörckStarsMauritz Björck
- DirectorAntônio SerraStarsFrancisco Marzullo
- DirectorGerolamo Lo SavioStarsVittoria LepantoAlberto NepotiDante CappelliThis picturesque narrative of Spain, from the magic pen of the brilliant writer, Posper Merimee, and set to music by the immortal Bizet, is the subject now presented in film d'art form. Madame Lepanto as Carmen, typifies the description of the Spanish girl. Don Jose Navarro, a Basque, and a Christian of the ancient type, had enlisted in the cavalry regiment of Almanza and was on duty at the tobacco factory in Seville where four or five hundred girls were employed in rolling cigars. As the bell rings for the girls to return to their work the young men watch them as they pass. One, a handsome, merry-looking girl, the beauty of the place and known to all as "La Carmencita," struts by the line of admiring men. Don Jose being a quiet sort of fellow, is not much attracted at first by the saucy-looking beauty, who, not accustomed to being ignored, asked Navarro to give her the chain he is fashioning out of some brass wire. Navarro replied that he could not, as he was making it for a certain purpose, whereupon she took the flower from her month and struck him in the face with it, much to the amusement of all the others. As Carmen passed on. Navarro, when no one was looking, stooped and picked up the flower and put it in his pocket. Two or three hours after this incident a porter rushed into the guard house saying that one of the factory girls had been murdered. With several of his comrades Don Jose hurried to the factory, where he beheld a wounded woman lying on the floor and recognized Carmen in the grasp of five or six of her companions. When the wounded girl beheld the soldiers, she accused Carmen, who stood with a defiant expression on her face. Don Jose's duty was plain: he must arrest the girl. So taking her gently by the arm (she being a woman) he bound her hands behind her and placed her under arrest. The wily gypsy asked her for her mantilla and then started off with Don Jose. On the way she turned and asked him in a childlike tone where he was taking her, Don Jose, determined to do his duty, answered that he was taking her to prison. Upon which she begged and pleaded with him to have mercy. Soon, therefore, when they come to a narrow lane, with one throat of her tiny hand she gives Don Jose a push, and he obligingly falls back and his prisoner hopping over his prostrate body regains her liberty. Navarro is compelled to return to the guard house without succeeding in locating her, and consequently is reduced to the ranks and imprisoned for a month. While he is in prison his keeper comes to him one day with a loaf of bread, which he said was sent him by his cousin. Navarro knows very well that he has no cousin in Seville and immediately suspects that Carmen is responsible for the loaf of bread. As he attempts to cut it his knife strikes something hard and he finds that a small English file has been placed in the dough before it was baked. He also finds two pastries with which Carmen evidently intended him to purchase a civilian's coat, and also a note from Carmen telling him to meet her at Lillas Pastia's. Thanks to the gypsy girl's thoughtfulness, Navarro escapes and finds his love waiting for him at the old gypsy eating house. Well, the end of it all is that Carmen has decided to persuade Navarro to join a band of smugglers. At first he would not listen to it, but finally out of love for the girl he consented. For his devotion, however, the fickle beauty repays him by flirting with other admirers, thus making Don Jose most unhappy. She had at this time become acquainted with a very handsome and skillful picador named Lucas. One day one of his comrades told him that he saw Carmen in a shop with Lucas and Navarro became inflamed and questioned the girl, who confessed her love for the picador, at the same time tearing off her finger a ring Don Jose had given her. The latter, unable any longer to control his rage, strikes her a deadly blow with his knife and then remains with arm uplifted as if turned to stone as he gazes down on the huddled up little figure of the woman he had so passionately loved.