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A Chronology of Cinema in Germany and Elsewhere
Cinematic History in Germany, France, and the USA
The Ufa Story - A book about the history of Germany's great film studio.
1891 - Thomas Alva Edison unveils his Kinetograph camera and Kinetoscope motion picture viewer (not a projector) in the U.S. Edison fails to see the advantages of a projection system until much later. His specificatons for 35mm celluloid film stock from George Eastman (Kodak) set a standard that endures today.
 The first horror film, DAS CABINET DES DR. CALIGARI was first screened in Berlin on 27 February 1920. It was produced at the Decla-Film studios in Berlin-Weissensee. PICTURED: Werner Krauss (Dr. Caligari), Conrad Veidt (Cesare), and Lil Dagover (Jane).
Summer 1892 - Max Skladanowsky (1863-1939) of Berlin makes one of the first motion pictures using the new Kodak film and his Bioscop invention.
1 November 1895 - Max Skladanowsky (IMDb link) projects the world's first movie shown to the public on a screen at the Wintergarten amusement hall in Berlin, almost two months before the Lumière brothers' first public showing in Paris. The Bioscop film's eight features, including scenes of a garden restaurant in Berlin, run a total of about 15 minutes. The event is enthusiastically reported in a Berlin newspaper dated 5 Nov. 1895.
28 December 1895 - In Paris the Lumière brothers give the first public showing of a short film entitled Leaving the Lumière Factory using their own Cinématographe invention. Although Skladanowsky had beat them in the first public showing of a motion picture, the French Cinématographe would prove technologically superior to the German Bioscop, which soon fades into obscurity. The Lumières also are said to have held private showings of their cinematic device several months prior to the public showing.
1896 - Oskar Messter (1866-1943) invents the so-called Maltese Cross shutter device still used in film projectors today. He also makes some of the first movies in Germany. Messter as inventor, exhibitor, distributor, producer was to become one of Germany's most significant film pioneers, and a founder of Ufa.
1896 - Late in the year, Oskar Messter opens an indoor film studio on Berlin's Friedrichstraße and hires some of Germany's very first film directors. He is one of the first film producers to realize the advantages of an indoor studio, making filmmakers less dependent on the variable German weather.
September 1896 - Oskar Messter takes over Berlin's first cinema at 21 Unter den Linden, but permanent film theaters would not become a trend until after 1900.
1898 - Deutsche Mutoskop- und Biograph GmbH (German Mutoscope and Biograph, Inc.) film production company founded in Berlin.
31 October 1900 - Oskar Messter founds Projection GmbH (Projection Co., Inc.), known after 1902 as Messters Projection GmbH. By May 1905 there were 16 permanent cinema houses in Berlin. By 1907 the number would climb to 139.
29 August 1903 - Oskar Messter shows the first of his Biophon Tonbilder (sound pictures) in Berlin's Apollo Theater. His system using a synchronized gramophone is similar to that of Gaumont in France, but Messter's sound pictures are a passing German fad and sound films won't appear again until 1927.
November 1903 - The son of Austrian immigrants, Marcus Loew opens penny arcades (peep shows) in New York and Cincinatti. Loew would later found the Loew's theater chain and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM).
1904 - Deutsche Mutoskop- und Biograph GmbH builds new studios in the Berlin suburb of Lankwitz. The nine-minute-long German film Der Raubmord am Spandauer Schifffahrtskanal bei Berlin (Robbery and Murder on the Spanau Ship Canal Near Berlin) is modelled on the American Western, The Great Train Robbery (1903) which has a running time of 10 minutes.
1905 - Kinomatographen- und Film-Fabriken GmbH (Kinomatograph and Film Factory, Inc.) founded by Alfred Duskes. He would be one of Messter's biggest competitors.
1906 - Paul Davidson founds the Allgemeine Kinematographen Gesellschaft Union-Theater für lebende und Tonbilder GmbH (U.T., General Kinematograph Co. Union Theater for Living and Sound Pictures, Inc.) The first U.T. theater opens in Frankfurt am Main on 21 February. In the U.S., German immigrant Carl Laemmle opens his first nickelodeon in Chicago four days later. (Laemmle will found IMP in 1909 and Universal Pictures in 1912.)
Summer 1906 - The Biograph, Edison, and Vitagraph film studios in New York City, currently the center of U.S. film production, are all running at full speed.
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1909 - Jules Greenbaum founds the Deutsche Vitascope Gesellschaft film production company after breaking away from Deutsche Bioscop-GmbH, which he had founded earlier. Greenbaum builds the first studios southwest of Berlin, in a location later known as Babelsberg, Germany's Hollywood. Deutsche Bioscop-GmbH continues under the leadership of Guido Seeber.
1909 - Projektions AG Union (PAGU) is the new name for Davidson's former U.T. In the U.S., Louis B. Mayer opens his first cinema in Boston in April.
1912 - "Richard III," one of the first feature films ever made in the U.S., is released. (According to the American Film Institute, the recently discovered "Richard III" is the oldest surviving American feature film, the second ever to be produced in the U.S., and the world's first Shakespeare film.)
28 February 1912 - Production begins on the first film to be made in Deutsche Bioscop's new Babelsberg glass studios southwest of Berlin: Der Totentanz ("The Death Dance") with the Danish filmstar, Asta Nielsen (1883-1972). In 1921 Deutsche Bioscop will become part of Ufa, and Babelsberg will be Ufa's main studio complex.
28 February 1912 - Literaria Film GmbH is Alfred Duskes' new film company. Literaria builds a new glass studio in the Tempelhof section of Berlin in the spring of 1913.
1913 - Oskar Messter expands his film empire by founding Messter Film GmbH, devoted exclusively to motion picture production. Hollywood and Santa Monica in California are becoming the new centers of American film production.
1 August 1914 - World War I begins. In October the Messter-Woche weekly newsreel begins. Charlie Chaplin made his first picture for Keystone (directed by Mack Sennet's Austrian director Henry Lehrman) in Hollywood in January.
1915 - D.W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation is released in the U.S. The controversial Civil War epic was made on a budget of just over $100,000.
February 1915 - Decla-Film-Gesellschaft (Decla Film Co.) founded by Erich Pommer, later an important producer and head of Ufa. He went to Hollywood in 1934.
1916 - Deutsche Lichtspiel-Gesellschaft e.V. (DLG, German Motion Picture Company) founded by Alfred Hugenberg. He would later bail out a bankrupt Ufa in 1927.
January 1917 - The German High Command establishes the Bild- und Film-Amt (BUFA, Picture and Film Office) to better influence German public opinion during the war.
17 December 1917 - Universum Film AG [Aktiengesellschaft, stock company] (Ufa, Universal Film, Inc.) is officially registered in Berlin and capitalized at 25 millon marks. Among others, Pommer's Decla and Davidson's Pagu become part of Ufa.
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Related Pages
The Ufa Studios
The Ufa Story (book)
The Emelka Studios (Munich)
Film Studios
Film Trivia Quiz
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