The Olympic Games of 1900 1900
A series of short motion-studies of athletes for the 1900 Olympics in Paris.
A series of short motion-studies of athletes for the 1900 Olympics in Paris.
Naval ratings pulling along naval guns during the Boer War.
Cleveland Fire Department rushes to extinguish a fire as a crowd watches.
Solser en Hesse was a short Dutch silent film featuring the comedians Lion Solser and Piet Hesse. the film was first distributed in the Netherlands by 'Edison's Ideal' in 1900, and second film starring the two men and under the same name was released in 1906 by 'The Royal Bioscope'. Both films are lost.
A Chinese dragon parade.
People riding on a moving platform / walkway.
Prince Edward of York, executing the manual of arms with the British flag.
A group of tambours and dancers in traditional outfits pass the camera.
A prince gets the help of a fairy to aid in his conflict with a wizard.
A trio of prankish boarders wreak havoc on their landlady and an intervening policeman.
The single camera position is from the top of a building identified as the Trocadero Palace; The camera is pointed toward the Eiffel Tower. The film shows only up to the first arch of the Eiffel Tower.
A magician presents a circular piece of paper from which he removes the flags of the allies. Then from each flag he produces a soldier from the respective country, and finally he produces a Chinaman. But hardly have the allies seen the latter than they pounce on him and try to cut him into pieces. The funniest part of our story is that the Chinaman escapes in a balloon, with an expression of childish innocence on his face as the allies try to cut him up.
Comic scenes taken at the Nouveau-Cirque by the two famous clowns Foottit and Chocolat. To separate Foottit and Chocolat who are fighting, their servant brings a policeman to whom the two accomplices play all sorts of tricks.
White’s camera offers several 360-degree pans of views of the fairground, then amazes by tilting up and down the Eiffel Tower, and concludes with a stunning tracking shot to the highest point above Paris. Exhibitors freely grouped films into nascent narratives such as those displayed here. - Bruce Posner
A white cat is placed on a horse's back, with trainer and two other onlookers. c1900.
A short clip of street life in the French village Chamonix.
A panoramic shot, making a full circle, at the 1900 Paris Exposition. It begins and ends looking at the front of the Palace of Electricity. As it pans, first we see a workman hosing down the promenade. Men and women walk past, all wearing hats. We see the base of the Eiffel Tower, which the Palace faces. A couple strolls. A mother and daughter walk passed, father is slightly ahead wearing a boater. Three men in uniform walk toward the camera as it comes to a stop facing the Palace.
Footage from the dawn of film taken in Belle Époque-era Paris, France from 1896-1900.
1900 Gaumont version of the ubiquitous Serpentine dance, this one hand tinted. Filmmaker anonymous. (not to be mistaken with Alice Guy-Blaché's version with Madame Ondine, from the same year and company)