- 12
- 292 154
SilentCaligari
Приєднався 10 чер 2011
Bluebeard (1944)
A killer of young women, dubbed Bluebeard, is loose in Paris. Lucille and her friends meet Gaston Morrell, a puppeteer. He invites them to a show the next night; they go. Afterwards, he walks with Lucille; she offers to make costumes for his next show, he accepts, and feelings develop that may lead to love. She suspects he has a tragic past. Meanwhile, his leaving the show with Lucille prompts the jealousy of Renee, Gaston's sometime lover. Lucille's younger sister, Francine, comes back to Paris - her boyfriend is Inspector Lefebre, who's hunting for Bluebeard. Some clues point toward Lamart, a greedy art dealer. Who is in danger, and can Gaston be trusted? Starring John Carradine
Переглядів: 329
Відео
Classic 1940's Television
Переглядів 148 тис.9 років тому
Classic TV shows from the 1940's, mostly 1949.
Warning Shadows (1923)
Переглядів 32 тис.12 років тому
During a dinner given by a wealthy baron and his wife, four of her suitors attend the 19th century German manor. A shadow-player rescues the marriage by giving all the guests a vision of what might happen if the baron stays jealous and the suitors do not reduce their advances towards his beautiful wife. Or was it a vision?
Poor Little Rich Girl (1917)
Переглядів 1,1 тис.12 років тому
Poor Little Rich Girl is the story of a rich girl whose parents ignore her and whose servants push her around, until tragedy brings them to realize the error of their ways
The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927)
Переглядів 1,4 тис.12 років тому
A landlady suspects her new lodger is the madman killing women in London in this 1927 Alfred Hitchcock silent classic
Phantom of The Opera (1925)
Переглядів 28513 років тому
The original 1925 version of the Lon Chaney classic, Phantom of The Opera! Starring the Man of a Thousand Faces!
The Beloved Rogue (1927)
Переглядів 16 тис.13 років тому
John Barrymore and Conrad Veidt star in this classic 1927 Silent Film
Jack and the Beanstalk (1902 Silent Film)
Переглядів 46913 років тому
Thomas Edison's 1902 Silent Film version of "Jack and the Beanstalk"
Early Silent Films 1896-1912
Переглядів 72 тис.13 років тому
A collection of early Silent Films from the late 19th, to early 20th Century.
Xbox 360 Flickering screen problem Please Help!
Переглядів 16 тис.13 років тому
My Xbox 360 is having a graphics problem. The screen flickers and colors go all wierd everytime i turn it on. This happens on the dashboard, in game, and while playing dvds. (i have tryed a dvd with LOW quality video on it, and it plays ALOT better than this, so I think the GPU is dieing and has trouble playing sharper video) Please help me!
Frankenstein (1910) - Thomas Edison FIlm
Переглядів 60513 років тому
Thomas Edison's "FRANKENSTEIN"!! Considered lost for many years, Frankenstein was recently found and restored for all to see. Enjoy the first film version of Mary Shelly's Frankenstein!
Nosferatu - Hutter Cuts His Finger
Переглядів 3,9 тис.13 років тому
Nosferatu is a silent film by F.W. Murnau that was is based off of Bram Stoker's novel, Dracula. In this scene, Thomas Hutter (Jonathan Harker) cuts his finger, and upon seeing the blood, Nosferatu (Count Dracula) goes wild!
Hey, it’s “Buddy Sorrell” from the ‘Dick Van Dyke Show’! 2:32:00 - (He wasn’t funny back then either)
I LOVE how this scene is recreated in the new one. How the Count growls, it’s so feral!!
Too many anachronisms!
This reminds me of Notre Dame de Paris, the novel
❤❤❤😊
What the hell is this nonsense?
For whoever finds this comment. The first moment i saw the complete scene of this (this isn't complete) i laughed so hard 😂😂 I'm not sure if they were going for that but when orlock is staring back at Jonathan from down the hall. That scene is still creepy as F. I'm finishing the movie today so that's all i have for now
Lo mejor de la pelicula es la música
My mother told me her town citizens didn't really have mass tv ownership until the mid 50s. 40s tv then would have been for a very small percentage of folks, and at a high cost to own.
Wow nothing new under the sun . We’re still on this news lol
2:59:40!?
last.
not anymore
@@vsauce7632 you sure?
That motorist was a menace 😮.
Would be nice to got to live in those days
FABULOUS.
80 years later NBC only broadcast communism
Is that Walter Matthau?
Nope
I always found it weird watching TV from the 40s. I always thought of TVs as from the 50s.
And??? Your point??
@@DJK-cq2uy There is no point. I was just stating my surprise.
40's television all right, but "classic," I don't know.
...and all of these people are long dead now. That's a little creepy when you think about it.
Why?
i try to change the hdtv setting to 480 p after that my tv say out of signal, i think it's the hdmi cable n then i change the cable, still out of signal so i think it's the port, but before replacement i try to update flash, n after i try to go xell nand, the screen doing really fine n i update my kernel, after update i try to start the xbox but still got this out of signal from my tv, i really confused by this when i go to xell nand by pressing the cd button, my screen doing really fine, but when i start the xbox there is no signal, i tried everything for 3 days, like push the power button for hard reset, n then the Y n right trigger button n doesn't work so any tips for the case that i got
TV broadcasting grew so tremendously in the US in the late 1940s that the Federal Communications Commission put a moratorium in place on issuing licenses for new stations to sort out the bandwidth requirements. This lasted till 1952, and while some big cities had 3, 4, or 5 stations during this time, large parts of the country had no TV stations at all. So millions of people in the USA saw no television programs in the 1940s.
They didn't know how lucky they were.
Sem intertítulos/legendas e sem acompanhamento musical torna-se maçante, mas vale como documento histórico.
(From 12:05 to 41:41): Dead Ernest, Suspense TV, Season 1. Episode 8, episode aired May 3, 1949. Outdoor TV at this time and for quite some more years was a rarity, if seen at all.
I like to listen to rock albums while I watch these, Driving Rain by Paul McCartney is a good match for this.
Is that Mr Rogers in the first clip? That news about car costs???!!!
Pffft
Just one of the many problems that show up with the graphics chip. I'm sure it E74'd or red ringed a while later.
Thats what Mine did. Started glitching and putting random colors on the screen then not long after it got the ring of death. unplugged overnight and it still has the ring so I guess its done.
@@joedirt7604 sell it for parts on eBay. Or at least rip the disc drive out of it and sell that. If you had the tools you could put one of the decent 65nm chips on it and it'd last a very long time. ua-cam.com/video/D2HZqXDWksg/v-deo.html
Interesting in seeing Morey Amsterdam considering that he was on the 1960s Dick Van Dyke show. I had not realize that he had been in TV that long.
It is genuinely astonishing to anyone with a fair steeping in radio and TV, prose and music, of the third quarter pf the 20th Century (1950-1975), who has any habit of taking note or plain retaining production minutiae (personnel, especially), to find in this archive literally dozens of names and references here that are present and often prominent in that much-matured later time. Technical quality aside (if you're inclined to Exit this document, remember and indulge it with the same slack you allowed the earliest fax, cellular (and, before that, plain old "portable", non-cellular) phone, video and all the other stepping-stone techs) this collection has value just as a set of rosters, in the same way there are verses or chapters in the Bible that are "only" lists. They mean SOMETHING. At (2:30:00), just to snag one and point at it: the Dumont Network, which in those early times looked as big as anybody & for awhile DID get bigger, presents Morey Amsterdam. Yes, the same Morey Amsterdam who a dozen years later with Rose Marie costarred with a young guy named Dick Van Dyke in that new young comedian's mirror-in-a-mirror-in-a-mirror TV show about fictional TV writers for the fictional "Allan Brady Show". A VERY small world, also a very large one, which came to be seen with higher fidelity. And a good thing, too, as Van Dyke's TV wife was a newcoming ingenue named Mary Tyler Moore. The Amsterdam show has its own young lady, here in the late 1940s: Jacqueline Susann. Yup, she who in HER maturity penned a novel called "Valley of the Dolls". Perhaps you've heard of it. Things grew up fast. This document shows the almost bare ground. It's not perfect; baby steps never are. These are Baby TV's first steps.
Anyone know who the women is at 132:35 ? and is that Walter mathou at 209:45 ?
I believe that the woman was actress/comedienne Mary McCarty, who was a cast member of "The Admiral Broadway Revue". The woman who played the oriental dancer was Imogene Coca, who would later star with Sid Caesar, Carl Reiner, and Howard Morris on "Your Show Of Shows" on NBC.
una obra de arte cinematográfica de época
38:15 is gonna stick with me forever
POV: you're a soldier in 1945 year and you want to watch some TV after war! "Wow,what a good times"
If you were a soldier or sailor in World War II, and got badly injured in combat, but did not die, and got shipped back to the US to recuperate in a military hospital, chances are, you got your first experience watching television, as there were TV sets there to entertain the troops while they recuperated from their bad injuries and burns.
진짜 빈티지감성이 충만한 시기는 이때인데 이 시대는 별로 살고싶지가 않다ㅠㅠ전쟁이 많이 일어나던 시기 아니었나?ㅠㅠ2002년생이지만 1970~1980년대에서는 살아보고싶은데 1930~1940년대에서는 살고싶지가 않네요ㅠㅠ이젠 진짜로 전쟁이 안일어났으면 좋겠어요
What the hades??
Loved seeing Sid Caesar and Art Carney.
25 to 270? Jesus back then that must've been a helluva jump eh?
27:58 lol wut? batteries need water? do they also need wood chippings and a little igloo?
Fran was pretty good at steamrolling her way through the classic 1940s chauvinist attitude, lolz
Love
Love
Love
Hope you are coming
Love to watch the past better than the present
Good morning
"The Italian parliament were discussing now for 36 hours and they will probably go for another day if they feel like it." NOW THAT, THAT IS GOLDEN JOURNALISM.
You have hit the pizza on the head. This is what is missing. No anchovies could fill the distance.
@@angelsaltamontes7336 or pinneaple.
my favorite is where he ends the broadcast saying the Mexican secret police have found a rod of uranium that must have been stolen from the US. Well thats the news, good night.
If this was in the 40's why in the battery commercial the guy said that the doc would be in tiem to shake hands with the local 1960 person?
Half of these people are dead slow that means we are listening to dead people
"when news did what they were supposed to be doing reporting the news."
ok
For those wondering: some of the shows were produced on film. "The Lone Ranger" TV show started on film in 1949, and is one of the oldest US TV shows for which all the episodes (221 of them!) still exist. The really blurry ones were kinescopes, basically a film camera in front of a TV screen. Sometimes it was filmed for rebroadcast in the western time zones (one reason Hollywood claimed TV looked terrible). Sponsors who put their name on an entire show, would have filmed and kept kinescopes to make sure their commercials aired.