You are here:
Home / Archives for Georges Méliès
Short films rarely get major releases these days, so it’s no surprise that even serious movie fans often neglect them. But with the rise of websites like YouTube, shorts have finally found a viable exhibition platform. The following are ten of the most famous short films available online. Whether they’re art pictures, the early works [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Friday, August 26, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Internet, Movies · Tagged 1966 Cannes, A Trip to the Moon, Albert Lamorisse, Buster Keaton, Cannes film festival, car speeding, Chris Marker, Claude Lelouch, Dan Rohmer, director of films like Edward Scissorhands and Batman, Edward Scissorhands, Edwin Porter, Entertainment_Culture, Experimental film, films, Georges Méliès, Luis Buñuel, Movies, online films, online movies, Owl Creek Bridge, Ray Eames, Robert Enrico, Roger Jacquet, Salvador Dali, Short films, short movies, Silent films, the Cannes Film Festival, The Great Train Robbery, tim burton, Un chien andalou, walt disney
Some of the most influential and beloved horror films came from an era before gory special effects, prosthetic limbs designed to be torn off actors, and meager shock scares. These were the silent horror films. Even today, while many silent films have disappeared from popular consciousness, silent horror films still maintain a widespread audience. Whether [...]
Posted by Nathanael Hood on Wednesday, November 3, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged alfred hitchcock, America, Annabelle, auteurs, Baghdad, Balduin, Benjamin Christensen, Cabinet of Doctor Caligari, Caligari, Carl Boese, concert pianist, Conrad Veidt, Emil Jannings, Entertainment_Culture, film, Frankenstein, Georges Méliès, German Expressionism, Germany, Horror film, horror movies, influential movies, ivan the terrible, Jack the Ripper, Le Manoir du Diable, legendary horror director, Leo Birinsky, Lon Chaney Sr., Mad Love, Mary Shelley, Monster movie, Movies, Nanon, New York City,New York,United States, Paul Leni, Paul Orlac, Paul Wegener, Peter Lorre, Prague, Prague,Czech Republic, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Ripper statue, Robert Wiene, Roland West, salesman, scary movie, scientist, Silent films, silent horror, silent movies, Stellan Rye, the Bronx, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, The Cat and the Canary, The Golem, The Golem: How He Came into the World, The Hands of Orlac, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Man Who Laughs, The Monster, The Phantom of the Opera, The Student of Prague, The Unknown, Thomas Edison, Tod Browning, Waxworks, waxworks proprietor, Werner Krauss, William Dieterle