From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gaston Quiribet (1888–1972) was a French
film director,
cinematographer, and writer. He worked for
Hepworth Studios. He used stop motion techniques to achieve cinematographic tricks.
[1]
At the 2005 British Silent Film Festival, David Williams gave a presentation titled: Gaston Quiribet That Clever Frenchman.
[2]
- A Day with the Gipsies (1906)
-
Once Aboard the Lugger (1920), along with George Ames
- The Malvern Hills (1920)
[3]
-
Mr. Justice Raffles (film) (1921)
- A Day with the Gypsies (ca. 1922)
[4]
- The Coveted Coat (1924)
- Fugitive Futurist: A Q-Riosity (1924)
- The Night of the Knight (1924)
[5]
- The Death Ray (1924 film), a Q-Riosity film
- The Quaint Q's (1925)
[5] Director
- Q-riosities by 'Q' (1925)
[5]
- Plots and Blots (1925)
[5]
- Around Bettws-Y-Coed (1909)
[6]
- Autumn in the Forest (1909)
[6]
- Burnham Beeches (film) (1909)
[6]
- From the Woodland to the Sea (1915)
[6]
- Village and Wood (1915)
[6]
- Among the Mountains of North Wales (1915)
- A Ramble in the New Forest (1915)
[6]
-
^ Williams, David Richard (Spring 2005),
"Gaston Quiribet – The Life and Work of an Almost Unknown French Cameraman, Animator and Director" (PDF), SOCIETY FOR ANIMATION STUDIES NEWSLETTER, 18 (2): 11–12, archived from
the original (PDF) on Nov 1, 2019
-
^
"The 8th British Silent Cinema Festival". April 8, 2005.
-
^
"BFI Screenonline: Malvern Hills, The (1920)". www.screenonline.org.uk.
-
^
"BAM/PFA - Film Programs". archive.bampfa.berkeley.edu.
- ^
a
b
c
d
"Gaston Quiribet". BFI. Archived from
the original on March 29, 2019.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f Gifford, Denis (April 1, 2016).
British Film Catalogue: Two Volume Set - The Fiction Film/The Non-Fiction Film. Routledge.
ISBN
9781317740636 – via Google Books.