1913 was a particularly fruitful year for film as an art form, and is often cited one of the years in the decade which contributed to the medium the most, along with
1917.
The year was one where filmmakers of several countries made great artistic advancements, producing notable pioneering masterpieces such as The Student of Prague (Stellan Rye), Suspense (Phillips Smalley and Lois Weber), Atlantis (August Blom), Raja Harischandra (D. G. Phalke), Juve contre Fantomas (Louis Feuillade), Quo Vadis? (Enrico Guazzoni), Ingeborg Holm (Victor Sjöström), The Mothering Heart (D. W. Griffith), Ma l’amor mio non muore! (Mario Caserini), L’enfant de Paris (Léonce Perret) and Twilight of a Woman's Soul (Yevgenii Bauer).
December 29 – production starts on Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company's The Squaw Man, the first full-length
Hollywood feature film.
D. W. Griffith ends his series of Biograph shorts, begun in 1908, and leaves the
Biograph Company in New York City to make full-length motion pictures.
Atlantis (Danish-German co-production/ Nordisk) produced by
Ole Olsen, directed by
August Blom, written by
Gerhardt Hauptmann, starring Olaf Fons, Ida Orloff and Ebba Thomsen;
Michael Curtiz was assistant director; the first Danish full-length feature film.[10]
Babes in the Woods (French/ Pathe Freres) based on the fairy tale[11]
Back to Life (Universal) directed by Allan Dwan, starring Lon Chaney and Pauline Bush[12]
Balaoo the Demon Baboon aka Balaoo (French/Eclair), directed by Victorin-Hyppolite Jasset, starring Lucien Bataille and Camille Bardou, based on the novel by
Gaston Leroux; this film was remade as The Wizard (1927 film) and again as Dr. Renault's Secret (1942).[13]
Beauty and the Beast (Universal) directed by H. C. Matthews, based on the
Brothers Grimm fairy tale.[14]
The Bells, directed by
Oscar Apfel, starring Edward P. Sullivan and Sue Balfour, based on the play The Polish Jew by
Erckmann-Chatrian which was later adapted to English by
Leopold Lewis retitled The Bells.[15]
The Bells, directed by
George Lessey, produced by
Thomas Edison, starring May Abbey and Robert Brower; based on the Edgar Allan Poe poem of the same name[16]
The Bewitched Matches (French/ Eclair) directed by
Emile Cohl[17]
The Black Opal, (Ramo Films) based on the novel The Moonstone by
Wilkie Collins[18]
Brand of Evil (Essanay Films) directed by Harry McRae Webster, written by
Edward T. Lowe, starring Thomas Commerford and Ruth Stonehouse, based on the novel The Moonstone by
Wilkie Collins[21]
The Dead Secret (Monopol Films) directed by Stanner E. V. Taylor, starring Marion Leonard, based on the 1857 short story of the same name by
Wilkie Collins[26]
The Devil and Tom Walker (Selig) directed by Hardee Kirkland, written by Edward McWade, starring Harry Lonsdale and William Stowell (as Satan); based on the story by
Washington Irving.[28]
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (British/ Kineto-Kimemacolor) produced by
Charles Urban, filmed in color; this film was very sparsely distributed; one of the earliest horror films ever made in Great Britain.[30]
Dr. Trimball's Verdict (British/ Hepworth Films) directed by Frank Wilson, produced by
Cecil M. Hepworth, starring Alec Worcester[31]
From the Beyond (French/ U.S. co-production, Eclair Films/ American Standard) directed by
Oscar A. C. Lund, starring
Alec B. Francis and Barbara Tennant[40]
Ingeborg Holm, once described as the first "realistic" feature film
The Island of Bliss (German/ Brandon Films) directed by Arthur Kahane; based on a
Max Reinhardt play[62]
The Island of Terror (French/ Eclipse) directed by Joe Hamman (who also starred in it); an unauthorized film version of the 1896
H. G. Wells novel The Island of Dr. Moreau, made without Wells' permission.[63]
Isle of the Dead (Denmark/ Gluckstadt Films) directed by Wilhelm Gluckstadt [64]
The Man of the Wax Figures (French), directed by
Maurice Tourneur, aka L'Homme aux Figures de Cire[69]
Maria Marten: or, The Murder in the Red Barn (British/ Motograph Films) written and directed by
Maurice Elvey, starring Elizabeth Risdon, Nessie Blackford and Fred Groves; script incorporated ideas from several different stage play versions of the story; remade in 1928 and again in 1935.[70]
The Medium's Nemesis (Thanhauser Films) starring Mrs. Lawrence Marston, Sidney Bracey and Marie Eline[71]
The Other (Der Andere) aka Der Andere (German/ Vitascope), written and directed by Max Mack, starring
Albert Basserman, Hanni Weisse and Emmerich Hanus; based on a stage play by Paul Lindau which in turn was inspired by the novel Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde[78]
The Pied Piper of Hamlin (Edison Prods.) directed by George Lessey, starring Herbert Prior and Robert Brower.[82]
The Pit and the Pendulum, aka Rivals (Solax Films) directed by Alice Guy-Blache, starring Darwin Karr; based on the short story by
Edgar Allan Poe.[83]
Poisoned Waters (Nestor Films/ Universal) directed by Milton J. Fahrney, produced by
David Horsley, starring Valleria Alison and Louis Fitzroy[84]
The Queen of Spades (Italy/ Cines, Aquila) directed by Baldassare Negroni, starring Leda Gys, Hesperia and Ignazio Lupi; based on the story by Alexander Pushkin and its 1890 opera adaptation by Tchaikovsky.[86]
The Queen of Spades (Fidelity Films) based on the story by Alexander Pushkin; a lost film.[87]
Scrooge (British/ Big Features) directed by Leedham Bantock, starring Sir Seymour Hicks (who also wrote the screenplay); based on the
Charles Dickens novel A Christmas Carol.[92]
The Sheriff of Stone Gulch (Kalem) directed by Pat Hartigan, who appears in a starring role alongside
Ruth Roland,
Marshall Neilan and Vincente Howard.
Sherlock Holmes Solves the Sign of the Four (Thanhouser, U.S., 2 reels) starring Harry Benham as Holmes; film was released in U.K. as The Sign of Four
Simple Simon and the Haunted House, aka Onesime et la maison hante (French/ Gaumont) directed by Jean Durand, starring Ernest Bourbon and Gaston Modot; one in a series of more than 60 French silent films featuring the character Onesime (which means Simple Simon in English).[95]
Simple Simon and the Suicide Club (French/ Gaumont) directed by Jean Durand, starring Ernest Bourbon and Gaston Modot; a comic satire on
Robert Louis Stevenson's 1878 novel, The Suicide Club.[96]
The Spectre of Jago (Italy/ Savoia Films) directed by Alberto Carlo Lolli, starring Ubaldo Maria Del Colle; based on the novel by Charles Darlington.[99]
The Star of India (Blache Films) directed by Herbert Blache and Alice Guy-Blache, starring Frannie Fraunholz and
Claire Whitney; based on the 1868 novel The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins[101]
Strangers from Nowhere, aka Two Strangers from Nowhere (Blache Films) produced by Herbert Blache; plot was similar to "Faust".[102]
The Student of Prague (Germany/Denmark) produced by Apex/ Deutsch-Bioscop, directed by Stellan Rye and Paul Wegener, written by
Hanns Heinz Ewers, starring
Paul Wegener, John Gottowt, Grete Berger and
Lyda Salmonova; adapting the 1839
Edgar Allan Poe story William Wilson, the film explored the concept of the "doppelganger"; only inferior prints exist, edited down from 85 minutes to 41 minutes; the film was remade in 1926 and again in 1935.[103]
The Suicide Club (German/ Eichberg Films) directed by Joseph Delmont, starring Fred Sauer and Ilse Bois; based on the 1878
Robert Louis Stevenson short story of the same name.[104]
The Tempter (British) filmed in Color; directed by F. Martin Thornton and R. H. Callum, produced by
Charles Urban, starring
Harry Agar Lyons and Alfred de Manby; an early anthology fantasy film that predated Dead of Night (1945).[105]
The Tenderfoot's Ghost (produced by
Frontier Films/ St. Louis Motion Picture Co.)[106]
The Thief and the Porter's Head (Italy/ Milano Film) [107]
The Vampire (British/ Searchlight Films) remade in 1915 as Heba, the Snake Woman.[111]
The Vampire (U.S./ Kalem Films) directed by Robert G. Vignola, starring Harry Millarde, Marguerite Cortot, Alice Eis and Bert French; print exists in a museum.[112][113]
The Vampire of the Desert (Vitagraph) directed by Charles Gaskill, starring Helen Gardner and Teffi Johnson; a non-supernatural film based on a poem called The Vampire by
Rudyard Kipling[114]
Voodoo Fires (Tampa Films) directed by Frank Whitman, written by Joe Brandt; one of the earliest films to depict voodoo rituals, quite possibly an influence on the later
Bela Lugosi film, White Zombie (1932).
The Werewolf (U.S./ Bison Films, Universal) first known film to deal with the "werewolf" concept; filmed in Canada, directed by
Henry McRae, written by Ruth Ann Baldwin, starring Clarence Barton, Marie Walcamp and Phyllis Gordon; based on an 1898 story called "The Werewolves" by Honore Beaugrand; the last known print was destroyed in a fire in 1924.[115]
What the Gods Decree (French/ Eclair) directed by Victorin-Hippolyte Jasset, starring Charles Krauss and Josette Andriot (a statue of Kali comes to life).[116]
The Witch of Salem, directed by Raymond B. West, produced by
Thomas H. Ince, starring Charles Ray and Clara Williams; plot is similar to
D. W. Griffith's Rose O'Salem Town (1910).[119]
1913 was a particularly fruitful year for film as an art form, and is often cited one of the years in the decade which contributed to the medium the most, along with
1917.
The year was one where filmmakers of several countries made great artistic advancements, producing notable pioneering masterpieces such as The Student of Prague (Stellan Rye), Suspense (Phillips Smalley and Lois Weber), Atlantis (August Blom), Raja Harischandra (D. G. Phalke), Juve contre Fantomas (Louis Feuillade), Quo Vadis? (Enrico Guazzoni), Ingeborg Holm (Victor Sjöström), The Mothering Heart (D. W. Griffith), Ma l’amor mio non muore! (Mario Caserini), L’enfant de Paris (Léonce Perret) and Twilight of a Woman's Soul (Yevgenii Bauer).
December 29 – production starts on Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company's The Squaw Man, the first full-length
Hollywood feature film.
D. W. Griffith ends his series of Biograph shorts, begun in 1908, and leaves the
Biograph Company in New York City to make full-length motion pictures.
Atlantis (Danish-German co-production/ Nordisk) produced by
Ole Olsen, directed by
August Blom, written by
Gerhardt Hauptmann, starring Olaf Fons, Ida Orloff and Ebba Thomsen;
Michael Curtiz was assistant director; the first Danish full-length feature film.[10]
Babes in the Woods (French/ Pathe Freres) based on the fairy tale[11]
Back to Life (Universal) directed by Allan Dwan, starring Lon Chaney and Pauline Bush[12]
Balaoo the Demon Baboon aka Balaoo (French/Eclair), directed by Victorin-Hyppolite Jasset, starring Lucien Bataille and Camille Bardou, based on the novel by
Gaston Leroux; this film was remade as The Wizard (1927 film) and again as Dr. Renault's Secret (1942).[13]
Beauty and the Beast (Universal) directed by H. C. Matthews, based on the
Brothers Grimm fairy tale.[14]
The Bells, directed by
Oscar Apfel, starring Edward P. Sullivan and Sue Balfour, based on the play The Polish Jew by
Erckmann-Chatrian which was later adapted to English by
Leopold Lewis retitled The Bells.[15]
The Bells, directed by
George Lessey, produced by
Thomas Edison, starring May Abbey and Robert Brower; based on the Edgar Allan Poe poem of the same name[16]
The Bewitched Matches (French/ Eclair) directed by
Emile Cohl[17]
The Black Opal, (Ramo Films) based on the novel The Moonstone by
Wilkie Collins[18]
Brand of Evil (Essanay Films) directed by Harry McRae Webster, written by
Edward T. Lowe, starring Thomas Commerford and Ruth Stonehouse, based on the novel The Moonstone by
Wilkie Collins[21]
The Dead Secret (Monopol Films) directed by Stanner E. V. Taylor, starring Marion Leonard, based on the 1857 short story of the same name by
Wilkie Collins[26]
The Devil and Tom Walker (Selig) directed by Hardee Kirkland, written by Edward McWade, starring Harry Lonsdale and William Stowell (as Satan); based on the story by
Washington Irving.[28]
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (British/ Kineto-Kimemacolor) produced by
Charles Urban, filmed in color; this film was very sparsely distributed; one of the earliest horror films ever made in Great Britain.[30]
Dr. Trimball's Verdict (British/ Hepworth Films) directed by Frank Wilson, produced by
Cecil M. Hepworth, starring Alec Worcester[31]
From the Beyond (French/ U.S. co-production, Eclair Films/ American Standard) directed by
Oscar A. C. Lund, starring
Alec B. Francis and Barbara Tennant[40]
Ingeborg Holm, once described as the first "realistic" feature film
The Island of Bliss (German/ Brandon Films) directed by Arthur Kahane; based on a
Max Reinhardt play[62]
The Island of Terror (French/ Eclipse) directed by Joe Hamman (who also starred in it); an unauthorized film version of the 1896
H. G. Wells novel The Island of Dr. Moreau, made without Wells' permission.[63]
Isle of the Dead (Denmark/ Gluckstadt Films) directed by Wilhelm Gluckstadt [64]
The Man of the Wax Figures (French), directed by
Maurice Tourneur, aka L'Homme aux Figures de Cire[69]
Maria Marten: or, The Murder in the Red Barn (British/ Motograph Films) written and directed by
Maurice Elvey, starring Elizabeth Risdon, Nessie Blackford and Fred Groves; script incorporated ideas from several different stage play versions of the story; remade in 1928 and again in 1935.[70]
The Medium's Nemesis (Thanhauser Films) starring Mrs. Lawrence Marston, Sidney Bracey and Marie Eline[71]
The Other (Der Andere) aka Der Andere (German/ Vitascope), written and directed by Max Mack, starring
Albert Basserman, Hanni Weisse and Emmerich Hanus; based on a stage play by Paul Lindau which in turn was inspired by the novel Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde[78]
The Pied Piper of Hamlin (Edison Prods.) directed by George Lessey, starring Herbert Prior and Robert Brower.[82]
The Pit and the Pendulum, aka Rivals (Solax Films) directed by Alice Guy-Blache, starring Darwin Karr; based on the short story by
Edgar Allan Poe.[83]
Poisoned Waters (Nestor Films/ Universal) directed by Milton J. Fahrney, produced by
David Horsley, starring Valleria Alison and Louis Fitzroy[84]
The Queen of Spades (Italy/ Cines, Aquila) directed by Baldassare Negroni, starring Leda Gys, Hesperia and Ignazio Lupi; based on the story by Alexander Pushkin and its 1890 opera adaptation by Tchaikovsky.[86]
The Queen of Spades (Fidelity Films) based on the story by Alexander Pushkin; a lost film.[87]
Scrooge (British/ Big Features) directed by Leedham Bantock, starring Sir Seymour Hicks (who also wrote the screenplay); based on the
Charles Dickens novel A Christmas Carol.[92]
The Sheriff of Stone Gulch (Kalem) directed by Pat Hartigan, who appears in a starring role alongside
Ruth Roland,
Marshall Neilan and Vincente Howard.
Sherlock Holmes Solves the Sign of the Four (Thanhouser, U.S., 2 reels) starring Harry Benham as Holmes; film was released in U.K. as The Sign of Four
Simple Simon and the Haunted House, aka Onesime et la maison hante (French/ Gaumont) directed by Jean Durand, starring Ernest Bourbon and Gaston Modot; one in a series of more than 60 French silent films featuring the character Onesime (which means Simple Simon in English).[95]
Simple Simon and the Suicide Club (French/ Gaumont) directed by Jean Durand, starring Ernest Bourbon and Gaston Modot; a comic satire on
Robert Louis Stevenson's 1878 novel, The Suicide Club.[96]
The Spectre of Jago (Italy/ Savoia Films) directed by Alberto Carlo Lolli, starring Ubaldo Maria Del Colle; based on the novel by Charles Darlington.[99]
The Star of India (Blache Films) directed by Herbert Blache and Alice Guy-Blache, starring Frannie Fraunholz and
Claire Whitney; based on the 1868 novel The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins[101]
Strangers from Nowhere, aka Two Strangers from Nowhere (Blache Films) produced by Herbert Blache; plot was similar to "Faust".[102]
The Student of Prague (Germany/Denmark) produced by Apex/ Deutsch-Bioscop, directed by Stellan Rye and Paul Wegener, written by
Hanns Heinz Ewers, starring
Paul Wegener, John Gottowt, Grete Berger and
Lyda Salmonova; adapting the 1839
Edgar Allan Poe story William Wilson, the film explored the concept of the "doppelganger"; only inferior prints exist, edited down from 85 minutes to 41 minutes; the film was remade in 1926 and again in 1935.[103]
The Suicide Club (German/ Eichberg Films) directed by Joseph Delmont, starring Fred Sauer and Ilse Bois; based on the 1878
Robert Louis Stevenson short story of the same name.[104]
The Tempter (British) filmed in Color; directed by F. Martin Thornton and R. H. Callum, produced by
Charles Urban, starring
Harry Agar Lyons and Alfred de Manby; an early anthology fantasy film that predated Dead of Night (1945).[105]
The Tenderfoot's Ghost (produced by
Frontier Films/ St. Louis Motion Picture Co.)[106]
The Thief and the Porter's Head (Italy/ Milano Film) [107]
The Vampire (British/ Searchlight Films) remade in 1915 as Heba, the Snake Woman.[111]
The Vampire (U.S./ Kalem Films) directed by Robert G. Vignola, starring Harry Millarde, Marguerite Cortot, Alice Eis and Bert French; print exists in a museum.[112][113]
The Vampire of the Desert (Vitagraph) directed by Charles Gaskill, starring Helen Gardner and Teffi Johnson; a non-supernatural film based on a poem called The Vampire by
Rudyard Kipling[114]
Voodoo Fires (Tampa Films) directed by Frank Whitman, written by Joe Brandt; one of the earliest films to depict voodoo rituals, quite possibly an influence on the later
Bela Lugosi film, White Zombie (1932).
The Werewolf (U.S./ Bison Films, Universal) first known film to deal with the "werewolf" concept; filmed in Canada, directed by
Henry McRae, written by Ruth Ann Baldwin, starring Clarence Barton, Marie Walcamp and Phyllis Gordon; based on an 1898 story called "The Werewolves" by Honore Beaugrand; the last known print was destroyed in a fire in 1924.[115]
What the Gods Decree (French/ Eclair) directed by Victorin-Hippolyte Jasset, starring Charles Krauss and Josette Andriot (a statue of Kali comes to life).[116]
The Witch of Salem, directed by Raymond B. West, produced by
Thomas H. Ince, starring Charles Ray and Clara Williams; plot is similar to
D. W. Griffith's Rose O'Salem Town (1910).[119]