Alternative TitleThe movies begin : 133 complete motion pictures : 1894-1913
Kino on Video presents The movies begin
Note (General)English ; Silent film with music sound track
Parallel titles from 'Text' section of the disc "Program notes by film historian Charles Musser"
DVD production credits: This Kino on Video series is a production of Film Preservation Associates and the British Film Institute ; volume four produced by the British Film Institute ; produced for video by Heather Stewart ; music by [piano accompaniment] Neil Brand ; commentary by Barry Salt ; video production by David Pryce ; narrated by Charles Jamieson ; DVD design: Bret Wood ; authored by AGI Studios/Cinepost, Atlanta
"All film in this compilation have been made from material preserved by the British Film Institute and National Film Archive (London)"--Container
Originally produced in 1994. "c1994 Kino International Corp. DVD design: c2002 Kino International Corp. DVD packaging: c2002 Kino on Video : K236B DVD"
Issued in box (20 × 14 × 8 cm) with 4 other videodiscs (<BA68290948>, <BA68297299>, <BA6829746X>, <BA68298677>) ; subtitle on box: 133 complete motion pictures ; subtitle on spine of box: Recreating the dawn of cinema with archival 35mm prints ; "A five-volume boxed set"--Box ; "A five-DVD set"--Spine of box
Descriptive leaflet in container
Special features: detailed program notes by Charles Musser are located within the 'Text' section of the disc ; film access
中位の書誌: Title on container: The movies begin : a treasury of early cinema 1894-1913
'This volume, of films made between 1895 and 1905, has been compiled by the British Film Institute as a back-up resource to film screenings ... Titles are organized chronologically within production companies"--Text, Program notes by film historian Charles Musser, Begin essay
"Being forty formative works by Louis Lumière, Walter Hagger, R.W. Paul, George Albert Smith, James A. Williamson, James Bamforth &C."--Container
"While some may consider the cinema a distinctly American invention, the most influential figures during its infancy were two brothers in France: Auguste and Louis Lumière. In the beginning, they dominated world film production and distribution.Through the magic of cinema, such ordinary sights as the demolition of a wall, the arrival of a train, a family enjoying breakfast or workers exiting a factory were transformed into mystifying spectacles of light and motion, having their premiere on December 28, 1895"--Container
Data Provider (Database)国立情報学研究所 : CiNii Research
NCIDhttps://ci.nii.ac.jp/ncid/BA68296015 : BA68296015