Showing posts with label alice guy blache. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alice guy blache. Show all posts

29 September 2013

Alice Guy-Blaché - Falling Leaves (1912)

Falling Leaves is a 1912 American film by Alice Guy-Blaché.  It was produced by Solax Studios when it was based in Flushing, New York at the beginning of the 20th century. The 2004 National Film Preservation Foundation restored print runs 12 minutes.

10 September 2013

Alice Guy-Blaché - La Vie du Christ



La Vie du Christ (1906) - a narrative film by Alice Guy-Blaché featuring the life of Christ in 25 scenes. 

07 September 2013

04 September 2013

Alice Guy - her story

I read this interesting article http://filmint.nu/?p=9219
Here some films there mentioned:

Baignade das un torrent 1897



 Chez le magnetiseur 1987


La bonne absinthe 1989


02 June 2012

Alice Guy-Blaché - the consequences of feminism

Selected filmography
La Fée aux Choux (The Cabbage Fairy) (1896) 
Little Tich and his Big Boots (1900)
Sage-femme de première classe (First Class Midwife) (1902) 
Danses Gitanes (1905)
La Esméralda (1905) (based on the Victor Hugo novel, The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
L’Emeute sur la Barricade (1906)
The Birth, the Life and the Death of Christ (1906)
Madame’s Fancies (1907) 
La Saucisse (1907)
The Glue (1907)
The Irresistible Piano (1907)
A Fool and His Money (1912) 
Algie the Miner (1912) 
Making an American Citizen (1912) 

01 June 2012

Alice Guy-Blaché - La Fée aux Choux

La Fée aux Choux (The Cabbage Fairy) is one of the earliest narrative fiction films ever made. It was probably made before the first Méliès fiction film, but after the Lumière brothers' L'Arroseur Arrosé. The confusion stems from the uncertainty in the dating of these three films. Many film historians have accepted that La Fée aux Choux was made in April 1896, just a month or two before Méliès made his first fiction film. L'Arroseur arrosé (generally considered the earliest fiction film) was screened in December 1895.
La Fée aux Choux is sixty seconds long, possibly making it the earliest known film with a running time of at least one minute.
Alice Guy Blanché, the director of La Fée aux Choux, is one of the early cinema's most important figures, and had an extensive career as a director, producer and studio owner, working in both France and the United States. Guy Blaché appears in the film, dressed as a man.