A Royal Engineers sergeant shows how to load two carrier pigeons into a small wicker basket for transport. At the Rosyth seaplane base Felixstowe F2A flying boats and Short 184 seaplanes ride at ancho...
I. RAMC men help refugees in a street in Douai to load both themselves and their belongings into a British Army lorry. As the last one is loaded the tailboard is closed up and the people wave as the l...
Manufacture of components for Black and Decker tools. [Incomplete]
Shots of the "Empress of Britain" leaving Greenock for Canada and of the interior of the Parkhead steel works.
Craigbank Gardens, Edinburgh. The film has extensive footage of allotments, vegetable gardens and people tending the crops. Portree Horticultural Show also features towards the end of the film.
A tour of the principal centres in Scotland for road and rail networks - Stirling, Perth, Dundee, Aberdeen and Inverness.
Jeannie and Mattie are accepted for a seaside holiday camp. One of a series of fund-raising films produced in aid of the Necessitous Children's Holiday Camp Fund.
A camping expedition by an uncle and his nephew, showing the do's and don'ts of the countryside code.
Michael Shannon in "Salt and Fire" (2015/16)
Episode: Gene Ratio
Rosana Pastor, Ian Hart
"The Farmer and I" (2013-16)
Tamara Samonte
Episode: Ein kurzer Moment
German movie poster of "Above and Below" (2012-14)
Szene mit David Thornton
Daily production report No. 2, 24 June 1959 on the shooting of "Melodie und Rhythmus".
Hellwig, Albert. „Gebühren der Filmzensur.“ Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie, III, 11/12 (1913/1914): 259-263. Bericht über die Zensurgebühren.
O. Verf.. „Aus Schweden.“ Der Kinematograph 380 (1914). Bericht über den Einsatz des Films als Werbemedium für die schwedische Armee.
Der Kampf gegen die deutschfeindliche ausländische Kinoindustrie, Bild & Film. Zeitschrift für Lichtbilderei und Kinematographie, IV,1, (1914/1915), S. 9-11. Die deutsche Filmbranche sei noch immer ...
Martin Dentler GmbH. „Die richtigen Films zur richtigen Zeit.“ Der Kinematograph, 401 (1914): 11. Werbeanzeige, die mit der Bedeutung der beworbenen Filme angesichts des Krieges wirbt.