The year 1910 in film involved some significant events.
Events
March 12 – American actress
Florence Lawrence becomes "the first true movie star" after movie mogul
Carl Laemmle of
Independent Moving Pictures (I.M.P.) names her in advertisements announcing that he has signed the leading lady who has hitherto only been billed as "The Biograph Girl" by
Biograph Studios. Until now, studios had a policy of not releasing the names of their players, and prohibiting distributors from revealing the information. Lawrence's first I.M.P. release is The Broken Oath.[1]
The Cat That was Changed into a Woman (French/Pathe) directed by Michel Carre; this was the 2nd French film that adapted from the Aesop fable "Venus and the Cat" (see also 1909)[13]
Chibusa no enoki (Japanese) starred Matsunosuke Onoe [14]
The Children of Edward the Fourth (French/ Pathe-Film d'Art) directed by Henri Andreani, starring Rene Alexandre, Albert Bras, Jeanne Delvair [15]
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Denmark/ Nordisk) written and directed by
August Blom, starring
Alwin Neuss as Jekyll/Hyde, Viggo Larsen and Oda Alstrup; film is lost today[24]
Dr. Mesner's Fatal Prescription (British/ Warwick Productions)
The Dream of Old Scrooge (based on the Charles Dickens novel "A Christmas Carol")[25]
The Duality of Man (British/ Wrench Films) adapted The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by
Robert Louis Stevenson; some sources credit
Harry Brodribb Irving with directing this lost film[26]
The Golden Beetle (French/British co-production/ Continental-Warwick) directed by (and starring)
Henri Desfontaines, based on The Gold Bug, a story by
Edgar Allan Poe[36]
The Golden Supper (Biograph) features a premature burial[37]
Hop-Frog, aka The Jester (French/British co-production/ Continental-Warwick) directed by Henri Desfontaines, starring Colanna Romano, based on the 1849 short story by
Edgar Allan Poe (a lost film today)
The House of the Seven Gables, directed by J. Searle Dawley for Edison, starring
Mary Fuller as Hepzibah Pyncheon, based on the 1851 Nathaniel Hawthorne novel[39]
Jane Eyre, (Thanhouser) written and directed by Theodore Marston for producer Edwin Thanhouser; starring Marie Eline, Gloria Gallop and Frank Hall Crane[41]
Jane Eyre (The Mad Lady of Chester), directed by Mario Caserini (Italian/ Cines)[42]
A Japanese Peach Boy, produced by Thomas Edison[43]
King Philip the Fair and the Templars (French/ Eclair Film) directed by Victorin-Hyppolyte Jasset, starring Georges Saillard and Raoul d'Auchy; first film to deal with the topic of the Knights Templar[45]
Necklace of the Dead (Denmark/ Nordisk) directed by
August Blom, starring Ingeborg Middleboe Larsen, Thorkild Roose and Nicolai Neiiendam; said to be based on Edgar Allan Poe's short story The Oblong Box[53]
The Red Inn, aka L'Auberge Rouge (French/ Pathe) directed by Camille de Morlhon, written by Abel Gance, starring Jeanne Cheirel, Julien Clement, Jean Worms, and
Abel Gance, based on the novel by
Honore de Balzac[56]
Robert, the Devil: or, Freed from Satan's Power (French/ Gaumont) directed by Etienne Arnaud, starring Leonce Perret and Maurice Vinot; based on a 1831 libretto written by Eugene Scribe and Casimir Delavigne[57]
The Romance of the Mummy (French/ Pathe) based on the Theophile Gautier book[58]
The year 1910 in film involved some significant events.
Events
March 12 – American actress
Florence Lawrence becomes "the first true movie star" after movie mogul
Carl Laemmle of
Independent Moving Pictures (I.M.P.) names her in advertisements announcing that he has signed the leading lady who has hitherto only been billed as "The Biograph Girl" by
Biograph Studios. Until now, studios had a policy of not releasing the names of their players, and prohibiting distributors from revealing the information. Lawrence's first I.M.P. release is The Broken Oath.[1]
The Cat That was Changed into a Woman (French/Pathe) directed by Michel Carre; this was the 2nd French film that adapted from the Aesop fable "Venus and the Cat" (see also 1909)[13]
Chibusa no enoki (Japanese) starred Matsunosuke Onoe [14]
The Children of Edward the Fourth (French/ Pathe-Film d'Art) directed by Henri Andreani, starring Rene Alexandre, Albert Bras, Jeanne Delvair [15]
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Denmark/ Nordisk) written and directed by
August Blom, starring
Alwin Neuss as Jekyll/Hyde, Viggo Larsen and Oda Alstrup; film is lost today[24]
Dr. Mesner's Fatal Prescription (British/ Warwick Productions)
The Dream of Old Scrooge (based on the Charles Dickens novel "A Christmas Carol")[25]
The Duality of Man (British/ Wrench Films) adapted The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by
Robert Louis Stevenson; some sources credit
Harry Brodribb Irving with directing this lost film[26]
The Golden Beetle (French/British co-production/ Continental-Warwick) directed by (and starring)
Henri Desfontaines, based on The Gold Bug, a story by
Edgar Allan Poe[36]
The Golden Supper (Biograph) features a premature burial[37]
Hop-Frog, aka The Jester (French/British co-production/ Continental-Warwick) directed by Henri Desfontaines, starring Colanna Romano, based on the 1849 short story by
Edgar Allan Poe (a lost film today)
The House of the Seven Gables, directed by J. Searle Dawley for Edison, starring
Mary Fuller as Hepzibah Pyncheon, based on the 1851 Nathaniel Hawthorne novel[39]
Jane Eyre, (Thanhouser) written and directed by Theodore Marston for producer Edwin Thanhouser; starring Marie Eline, Gloria Gallop and Frank Hall Crane[41]
Jane Eyre (The Mad Lady of Chester), directed by Mario Caserini (Italian/ Cines)[42]
A Japanese Peach Boy, produced by Thomas Edison[43]
King Philip the Fair and the Templars (French/ Eclair Film) directed by Victorin-Hyppolyte Jasset, starring Georges Saillard and Raoul d'Auchy; first film to deal with the topic of the Knights Templar[45]
Necklace of the Dead (Denmark/ Nordisk) directed by
August Blom, starring Ingeborg Middleboe Larsen, Thorkild Roose and Nicolai Neiiendam; said to be based on Edgar Allan Poe's short story The Oblong Box[53]
The Red Inn, aka L'Auberge Rouge (French/ Pathe) directed by Camille de Morlhon, written by Abel Gance, starring Jeanne Cheirel, Julien Clement, Jean Worms, and
Abel Gance, based on the novel by
Honore de Balzac[56]
Robert, the Devil: or, Freed from Satan's Power (French/ Gaumont) directed by Etienne Arnaud, starring Leonce Perret and Maurice Vinot; based on a 1831 libretto written by Eugene Scribe and Casimir Delavigne[57]
The Romance of the Mummy (French/ Pathe) based on the Theophile Gautier book[58]