War documentary filmed in Val Camonica (Brescia). The film begins with images of supplies being downloaded from a train at the station of Edolo. Bread, tins of beef and cheeses were destined for the s...
"Hunger Blockade Germany" is one of three documentary films made by the American doctor and amateur filmmaker William Held during a stay in Berlin from 1919 to 1922. His films are especially interesti...
I. The film is often disjointed, but covers the transfer of American manpower and matériel across the Atlantic, culminating in their first major engagement in the Battle of Château-Thierry in June 1...
(Reel 1) The film stresses that it shows normal RAF life and has not deliberately selected its scenes. It begins with a training camp for pilots in France. New pilots arrive and are brought from the s...
(Reel 1) The film opens by stating that as the basis for the expansion of the Army in wartime the TA "may be a factor in the maintenance of peace". Men of 4th Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment, mar...
(Reel 1) The icebreaker SS Canada brings the cameraman and his colleagues into Archangel harbour in the middle of winter. The locals, in full furs, use sledges for transportation, some of them drawn b...
This film presents at least two distinct settings: on the one hand, the film reports on the progress of a construction site near Caen. From the foundations of the buildings to the roofs, the different...
This film document shows a ceremony of homage to the resistance fighters of the pharmaceutical laboratory Orga in Avignon, during which a memorial is unveiled. First, the officials (a prefect and a ge...
Michael Bohnen, Mia May ("Die Herrin der Welt", Teil 1-8)
Mia May (3.v.l.) ("Die Herrin der Welt", Teil1-8)
Arnold Korff. Mia May, Vladimir Gaidarow (v.l.n.r.) ("Tragödie der Liebe" 1-4)
Ines Schiller in the Deutsches Filmmuseum, Frankfurt am Main, on May 4, 2014
Karen Duve at the 25th Filmkunstfest Mecklenburg-Vorpommern on May 6, 2015 in Schwerin
Uli Gaulke at DFF - Deutsches Filminstitut & Filmmuseum on May 26, 2019
At the premiere of "Hanni & Nanni 3" in Munich, May 1, 2013
Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck at the Deutsches Filmmuseum on May 12, 2006
Screenplay (excerpt) of "Via Mala".
The pictures "Barbara la May" and "Can Can" had to be removed.The newsreel was permitted to young people under 16 years.