Episodi

  • Film scholar and preservationist Clara Auclair and Tristan talk quite a bit about comedy and tricks, those originating from the stage and those that could only come from the magic of filmic technology. That conversation leads into discussing the phenomenon of early recreations of real events…or are they “fakes!?”

    Clara teaches media studies at DIS Stockholm and works as a consultant for film archives. She is a DAFIV research fellow and co-secretary of Domitor, the International Association for the Study of Early Cinema, and is currently working on an edited collection of essays dedicated to the films of Alice Guy-Blaché with former guest Aurore Spiers.

    Films and resources mentioned:
    The Six Sisters Dainef (1902) - unknownMiss Dundee and Her Performing Dogs (1902) - Alice Guy-BlachéIngenious Soubrette (1902) - Ferdinand ZeccaThe Indiscreet Bathroom Maid (1902) - Georges HatotThe Eruption of Mount Pelee (1902) - Georges MélièsA Trip to the Moon (1902) - Georges MélièsLife and Passion of the Christ (1903) - Ferdinand ZeccaThe Human Fly (1902) - Georges MélièsNosferatu (1922) - F.W. MurnauThe Circus (1928) - Charlie ChaplinMartinique Disaster (1902) - Ferdinand ZeccaMt. Pelee Smoking Before Eruption (St. Pierre, Martinique) [1902] - J. Blair Smith and Edwin S. PorterMt. Pelee in Eruption and Destruction of St. Pierre (Martinique) [1902] - J. Blair Smith and Edwin S. PorterBurning of St. Pierre (Martinique) [1902] - J. Blair Smith and Edwin S. PorterThe Dreyfus Affair (1899) - Georges MélièsArrival of a Train at La Ciotat (1896) - Auguste and Louis LumièreCinema's First Nasty Women

  • A Trip to the Moon looms large in looking at the picture of 1902 in film. Georges Méliès' masterpiece is inarguably the most famous film of the early cinema period. But as will be explored by this season's guests, its part in reshaping the aesthetics, genres, and industrialization of the global film community exists alongside another version of film history.

    Films mentioned:
    A Trip to the Moon (1902) - Georges Méliès

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  • Propaganda, comedy, tricks; these approaches may seem to obscure truths. That is certainly their potential in film, but in this 1901 season finale, Tristan reflects on the through lines of his guests' picks and the conversations that stemmed from them.

    Also, he shares his personal five selections for 1901 and puts together the collective list of guest and listener submissions. That list, including all films submitted for the season, can be found at the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list.

    The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever: 1902 coming soon!

    Thank you to the guests of the third season:
    Ian ChristiePamela HutchinsonGrazia IngravalleElif Rongen-KaynakçiLawrence NapperFilms mentioned:
    The Big Swallow (1901) - James WilliamsonThe Death of Poor Joe (1901) - George Albert SmithDemolishing and Building up the Star Theatre (1901) - Frederick S. ArmitageDe Maasbrug te Rotterdam Omstreeks 1901 (1901) - unknownPanoramic View of the Morecambe Sea Front (1901) - unknownThe Brahmin and the Butterfly (1901) - Georges MélièsBluebeard (1901) - Georges MélièsThe Magic Sword (1901) - Walter R. BoothScrooge, or, Marley's Ghost (1901) - Walter R. Booth

  • All but one of the picks from Lawrence Napper, senior lecturer in Film Studies at King’s College London, come from the huge trove of discovered Mitchell & Kenyon films. These fascinating records of everyday life in Victorian and Edwardian England and the United Kingdom lead to an array of exciting tangents, while Lawrence also uses his one fictional choice to make a resonant comparison between repeat film viewing and traditional religious ceremonies.

    Lawrence’s publications include The Great War in Popular British Cinema: Before Journey’s End (2015) and Silent Cinema: Before the Pictures Got Small (2017). He is a regular on the KinoQuickies podcast and occasionally blogs at https://atthepictures.photo.blog/. Currently he is developing a book length study of The Opening of the Benton New Bank Tram Route (1913). Lawrence also hosts the annual British Silent Film Festival Symposium each spring at King’s College London.

    Visit the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own top five for 1901!

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Ride on the Tramcar through Belfast (1901) - unknownPanoramic View of the Morecambe Sea Front (1901) - unknownManchester Band of Hope Procession (1901) - unknownScrooge, or, Marley's Ghost (1901) - Walter R. BoothBailey’s Royal Buxton Punch and Judy Show in Halifax (1901) - unknownRescued by Rover (1905) - Cecil HepworthA Daring Daylight Burglary (1903) - Frank MottershawMary Jane's Mishap (1903) - George Albert SmithBuy Your Own Cherries (1904) - Robert W. PaulThe Big Swallow (1901) - James WilliamsonThe Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) - Brian HensonMegalopolis (2024) - Francis Ford CoppolaLa Chienne (1931) - Jean RenoirTram Ride into Halifax (1902) - unknownMovies under the Influence (2024) - Jocelyn Szczepaniak-Gillece

  • Tristan has been the grateful viewer of many an eye-popping restoration from Eye Filmmuseum in Amsterdam on YouTube. He expresses his thanks to Elif Rongen-Kaynakçi, Curator of Silent Film at Eye, before the two mostly discuss comedy films, with the broad genre nevertheless inspiring many different tangents from sexuality to the beginning of the film industry’s self-parody.

    Elif has worked on the discovery, restoration, and presentation of presumed lost films starring forgotten or neglected actresses such as Rosa Porten, Little Chrysia, Valeria Creti, and Constance Talmadge. She is directly involved with the programs of international archival festivals Il Cinema Ritrovato and Le Giornate del Cinema Muto and other events dedicated to silent cinema. Elif is also one of three curators of Cinema's First Nasty Women, a DVD box set of 99 films.

    Visit the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own top five for 1901!

    Films mentioned:
    What Is Seen Through a Keyhole - Ferdinand Zecca (1901)The Countryman and the Cinematograph - Robert W. Paul (1901)Arrosage général - Ambroise-François Parnaland (1901)The Finish of Bridget McKeen - Edwin S. Porter (1901)De Maasbrug te Rotterdam Omstreeks 1901 - unknown (1901)Metropolis - Fritz Lang (1927)Uncle Josh at the Moving Picture Show - Edwin S. Porter (1902)The Sprinkler Sprinkled - Louis Lumière (1895)

  • Grazia Ingravalle, Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor in Film at Queen Mary University of London, focuses her 1901 picks in relation to colonialism. She creatively tackles the premise of this show by talking not of the “best films” of the year, but “quite the opposite,” in her own words, to illustrate the effect of the medium at this time and beyond.

    Grazia has published about film archives, digitization, archival remix, colonial histories, and decolonization in several edited volumes and in The Moving Image, Screen, and the JCMS. Her monograph, Archival Film Curatorship: Early and Silent Cinema from Analog to Digital (also very relevant to the “tension” of this show) came out in December 2023. She serves as Vice-President of Domitor: The International Society for the Study of Early Cinema.

    Note: apologies for Tristan’s audio quality. It’s cleaned up as much as possible but it was captured in an inferior state!

    Films mentioned:
    Hands Off the Flag (1901) - unknownNankin Road, Shanghai (1901) - Joseph RosenthalPanorama of Grand Harbour, Malta, Showing Battleships, Etc. (1901) - William K.L. DicksonRoyal Visit of the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York to New Zealand (1901) - Joseph PerryManchester and Salford Harriers' Cyclists' Procession (1901) - unknownThe Birth of a Nation (1915) - D.W. GriffithNosferatu (1922) - F.W. Murnau

  • Pamela Hutchinson's Silent London has been a great resource for Tristan since even before he started the written essay series that gives this podcast its name about seven years ago. Now, she joins the show to provide some context yet again, especially for how 1901 filmmakers weren't marching neatly toward narrative (they were tiptoeing toward it, dancing around it) and how some were specifically deconstructing the still-fledgling medium, through the lens of her five picks.

    Pamela is a freelance writer, critic, curator, and film historian. Among her publications are two installments in the BFI Film Classics series: Pandora's Box and The Red Shoes.

    Visit the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own top five for 1901!

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Panoramic View of the Morecambe Sea Front - unknown (1901)Demolishing and Building Up the Star Theatre - Frederick S. Armitage (1901)The Death of Poor Joe - George Albert Smith (1901)The Big Swallow - James Williamson (1901)Histoire d'un crime - Ferdinand Zecca (1901)The Red Shoes - Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger (1948)Leaving Jerusalem by Railway - Alexandre Promio (1897)Rough Sea at Dover - Birt Acres (1896)Wicked Little Letters - Thea Sharrock (2023)Living - Oliver Hermanus (2022)The Mountain Eagle - Alfred Hitchcock (1926)London After Midnight - Tod Browning (1927)The Dairy Maid's Revenge - Frederick S. Armitage (1899)A Nymph of the Waves - Frederick S. Armitage (1900)Demolition of a Wall - Louis Lumière (1896)The Suicide Squad - James Gunn (2021)Dream of a Rarebit Fiend - Wallace McCutcheon and Edwin S. Porter (1906)The Entertainer - Tony Richardson (1960)Scrooge, or, Marley's Ghost - Walter R. Booth (1901)Greed - Erich von Stroheim (1924)Attack on a China Mission - James Williamson (1900)Stop Thief! - James Williamson (1901)Fire! - James Williamson (1901)Eraserhead - David Lynch (1977)

  • Film historian Ian Christie rewires Tristan’s brain a bit in this episode, as Ian draws parallels between the early film “adaptation” and the tableaux painting, both of which benefit from contemporary shared pathos. During the discussion of his five picks, among other things, he also provides insight into the Anglo-Boer War and the actuality genre’s dominance in 1901 even as trick films still draw our contemporary eyes.

    Ian is an author and Professor of Film and Media History at Birkbeck, University of London. Among his many works are the book Robert Paul and the Origins of British Cinema (2019) and the TV production The Last Machine (1995), both of which are discussed in this episode.

    Visit the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own top five for 1901!

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Panorama of Ealing from a Moving Tram (1901) - William K.L. DicksonThe Man with the Rubber Head (1901) - Georges MélièsThe Big Swallow (1901) - James WilliamsonThe Death of Poor Joe (1901) - George Albert SmithThe Waif and the Wizard (1901) - Walter R. BoothLeaving Jerusalem by Railway (1897) - Alexandre PromioScrooge, or, Marley's Ghost (1901) - Walter R. BoothSanta Claus (1898) - George Albert SmithHugo (2011) - Martin ScorseseThe Launch of H.M.S. Albion (1898) - Robert Paul

  • About five years into film's existence as a publicly available invention and art form, 1901 offers up a number of exciting threads for where the medium did and did not go. Some aspects may appear familiar: a form of a "close-up," attempts at adapting "narrative," and the use of the movies as a propaganda tool.

    But as guests will point out, the intent and reception of such things may be alien to our modern eyes, from the idea of a moving picture "tableaux" to colonizing forces. Join host Tristan Ettleman for an exploration of 1901 with The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever!

    You can submit your own top five films for 1901 at the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list.

    Films mentioned:
    Fire! (1901) - James WilliamsonThe Big Swallow (1901) - James WilliamsonScrooge, or, Marley's Ghost (1901) - Walter R. BoothThe Story of a Crime (1901) - Ferdinand Zecca

  • Although this season has emphasized that the sudden transition into the 20th century didn't magically advance the still very young art form of cinema, the films selected by the guests for the 1900 edition of The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever represent exciting developments. Color, sound, trickery, medicine, animation, and the ever-present regret that so many films from this era are lost were recurring themes in the conversations throughout the season.

    In this finale, host Tristan Ettleman briefly summarizes these themes, shares his five picks for 1900, and creates a high-level list from guests' and listeners' picks. That list, including all films submitted for the season, can be found at the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list.

    The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever: 1901 begins soon!

    Thank you to the guests of the second season:
    Malcolm CookMatthew SolomonFrank KesslerCarolyn JacobsEnri CeballosFilms mentioned:
    A Railway Collision (1900) - Walter R. BoothThe Doctor and the Monkey (1900) - Georges MélièsCyrano de Bergerac (1900) - Clément MauriceThe Christmas Dream (1900) - Georges MélièsJoan of Arc (1900) - Georges MélièsHamlet (1900) - Clément MauriceThe Cabbage Fairy (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéPierrette's Escapades (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéThe One-Man Band (1900) - Georges MélièsThe Enchanted Drawing (1900) - J. Stuart Blackton

  • The affinity Enri Ceballos has for dance is intensely represented by his picks for 1900, four of which feature the sheer joy of human movement. Both in front of and behind the screen, these films (all French and helmed by women!) also represent the diversity of gender and sexuality at play, along with sound and color technologies, in early cinema's history.

    Enri is the General Director for the Mexico International Silent Film Festival, a PhD student at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), and a member of Women and Film History International.

    Films and resources mentioned:
    La concierge (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéDanse directoire (1900) - Marguerite VrignaultDance of the Seasons: Winter (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéGavotte (1900) - Marguerite VrignaultPierrette's Escapades (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéCyrano de Bergerac (1900) - Clément MauriceHamlet (1900) - Clément Maurice"Do You Believe in Fairies? Cabbages, Victorian Memes, and the Birth of Cinema: Seeing Sapphic Sexuality in the Silent Era" - Kiki Loveday

  • Considering Carolyn Jacobs' research focuses on the cultural history of media, especially in relation to histories of medicine, science, and public health, it makes sense that she examines her five picks through those lenses. From kissing panics to women being barred from performing surgery, the medical view of the discussed films brings new angles to understanding early cinema.

    Carolyn is an Assistant Professor of Media Studies in the Communication Department at Central Connecticut State University. Her current book project, Sanitizing Cinema: Public Health and the Regulation of American Film, considers the effects of health emergencies on the development of motion pictures in the early twentieth century.

    Visit the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own top five for 1900!

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Exploding a Whitehead Torpedo (1900) - James H. WhiteGrandma's Reading Glass (1900) - George Albert SmithThe Kiss (1900) - unknownThe Cabbage Fairy (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéTurn-of-the-century Surgery (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéOppenheimer (2023) - Christopher NolanThe Cheese Mites (1903) - F. Martin DuncanTo Demonstrate How Spiders Fly (1909) - F. Percy SmithThe Acrobatic Fly (1910) - F. Percy SmithMad Max (1979) - George MillerThe Kiss (1896) - William HeiseFred Ott's Sneeze (1894) - William K.L. DicksonThe Horse in Motion (1878) - Eadweard MuybridgeSomething Good/Negro Kiss (1898) - William SeligThe Cabbage Fairy (1896) - Alice Guy-BlachéMidwife to the Upper Class (1902) - Alice Guy-BlachéFalling Leaves (1912) - Alice Guy-BlachéLa séparacion de Doodica-Radica (1902) - Eugène-Louis Doyen"Do You Believe in Fairies? Cabbages, Victorian Memes, and the Birth of Cinema: Seeing Sapphic Sexuality in the Silent Era" - Kiki Loveday

  • From misattribution to missing sound, this conversation with Frank Kessler has a bit of lamentation for the lost works and context of early cinema. But there's also some celebration that we can view any films from the turn of the century (and earlier), including his picks that include trickery and evolving film language.

    Frank is professor in media history at Utrecht University. His research activities concern mainly the field of early cinema and visual media in the 19th and early 20th century. His work includes the research program "The Nation and Its Other" and he acted as project leader and editor for A Million Pictures: Magic Lantern Slides in the History of Learning.

    Films and resources mentioned:
    The One-Man Band (1900) - Georges MélièsAttack on a China Mission (1900) - James WilliamsonGrandma's Reading Glass (1900) - George Albert SmithThe Cabbage Fairy (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéHamlet (1900) - Clément MauriceA Railway Collision (1900) - Walter R. BoothSan Francisco Earthquake & Fire: April 18, 1906 (1906) - unknownThe Dreyfus Affair (1899) - Georges MélièsA Sneaky Boer (1901) - unknownThe Cabbage Fairy (1896) - Alice Guy-BlachéHugo (2011) - Martin ScorseseRescued by Rover (1905) - Cecil HepworthCyrano de Bergerac (1900) - Clément MauriceAlice Guy Films a ‘Phonoscène’ in the Studio at Buttes-Chaumont, Paris (1907) - Alice Guy-Blaché'They thought it was a marvel' : Arthur Melbourne-Cooper (1874-1961) : pioneer of puppet animation (2009) - Tjitte de Vries and Ati MulWomen Film Pioneers Project

  • Matthew Solomon has taught film history and theory at the University of Michigan since 2011, with special interests in early and silent cinema, classic Hollywood filmmaking, and French film. He brings all that to bear on his five picks for 1900, which contain techniques that have only retroactively been considered early displays of evolving film grammar...and indeed, they are two-fifths French.

    Matthew is the author of Disappearing Tricks: Silent Film, Houdini, and the New Magic of the Twentieth Century and Méliès Boots: Footwear and Film Manufacturing in Second Industrial Revolution Paris, among many other books, articles, and publications.

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Let Me Dream Again (1900) - George Albert SmithGrandma's Reading Glass (1900) - George Albert SmithThe Enchanted Drawing (1900) - J. Stuart BlacktonThe Magic Book (1900) - Georges MélièsThe One-Man Band (1900) - Georges MélièsThe Great Train Robbery (1903) - Edwin S. PorterHugo (2011) - Martin ScorseseThe Cabbage Fairy (1896) - Alice Guy-BlachéThe Cabbage Fairy (1900) - Aice Guy-BlachéThe Playhouse (1921) - Buster Keaton and Edward F. ClineThe Sprinkler Sprinkled (1895) - Louis Lumière

  • Malcolm Cook, Associate Professor of Film at the University of Southampton, found it challenging to pick just five works to represent 1900. But his selections embody the cross-section of genres and approaches across three countries, demonstrating how the turn of the century didn't suddenly disrupt the paradigms of the cinema of attractions but evolved them in exciting ways.

    Malcolm is the author of Early British Animation: From Page and Stage to Cinema Screens (2018) and co-editor (with Kirsten Moana Thompson) of the collection Animation and Advertising (2019). His current research focusses on useful animation, especially in relation to petroleum industries, with recent articles on this published in Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal (2023) and Media+Environment (2024).

    Films and resources mentioned:
    The Enchanted Drawing (1900) - J. Stuart BlacktonThe One-Man Band (1900) - Georges MélièsExplosion of a Motor Car (1900) - Cecil HepworthSolar Eclipse (1900) - Nevil MaskelynePierrette's Escapades (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéA Trip to the Moon (1902) - Georges MélièsThe Wizard of Oz (1939) - Victor FlemingAnnabelle Serpentine Dance (1895) - William K.L. Dickson and William HeiseWorkers Leaving the Lumière Factory (1895) - Louis LumièreHow It Feels to Be Run Over (1900) - Cecil HepworthThe Automatic Motorist (1911) - Walter R. BoothCrash (1996) - David CronenbergThe Magic Book (1900) - Georges MélièsHugo (2011) - Martin ScorseseWomen Film Pioneers Project

  • The second season of The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever narrows down from the decade-plus of the first down to just one calendar year. The first year of the 20th century didn't suddenly erupt the cinematic world into wholly unprecedented developments. But it fits into the trends and patterns steadily evolving through the last years of the 1800s, even as exciting changes and quality films illustrate increased output and popularity.

    From medical viewpoints to "animation," retroactive markers of "filmic language" to attribution mysteries, the conversations with host Tristan Ettleman's guests are sure to dispel some myths and preconceived notions of this era of cinema and encourage the discovery of both well-documented and relatively obscure movies. Join us for an exploration of 1900 with The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever!

    Films mentioned:
    Hamlet (1900) - Clément MauriceCyrano de Bergerac (1900) - Clément MauriceJoan of Arc (1900) - Georges Méliès

  • Invented within the last decade or so of the 1800s, "cinema" (a fluid definition not owed to any one person or group as this season has demonstrated) grew exponentially through the end of the century. The guests for this first season of The 5 Best Films of Every Year Ever have demonstrated the diversity of filmic form in this incubatory period, including technologies, genres, and representation before and behind the camera associated with much later decades. In this finale, host Tristan Ettleman summarizes the trends of the era, shares his five picks for the 1800s, and creates a "mini-canon" from guests' and listeners' picks. You can view that list at the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com. And be sure to look forward to the next season on 1900, starting soon!

    Thank you to the guests of this first season:
    J.J. DiUbaldiAurore SpiersMaggie HennefeldBryony DixonPeter DomankiewiczFilms mentioned:
    Pauvre Pierrot (1892) - Charles-Émile ReynaudCinderella (1899) - Georges MélièsThe Astronomer's Dream (1898) - Georges MélièsAnnabelle Serpentine Dance (1895) - William K.L. Dickson and William HeiseAutour d'une cabine (1894) - Charles-Émile ReynaudWorkers Leaving the Lumière Factory (1895) - Louis LumièreSomething Good/Negro Kiss (1898) - William SeligThe Four Troublesome Heads (1898) - Georges MélièsThe Dairy Maid's Revenge (1899) - Frank S. Armitage

  • Peter Domankiewicz is a film director (Tea & Sangria), screenwriter, and journalist with a long-standing interest in the origins of cinema. That interest manifests in five picks that deconstruct some of the myths surrounding early film, including the definition of “cinema” and its “invention,” a widescreen format at least 70 years before it became a standard, and a genuinely exclusive explanation of a film residing in the French national film archive that Peter was able to identify this summer.

    He is currently in the final year of a fully-funded PhD at De Montfort University, examining the work and inventions of the controversial moving picture pioneer, William Friese-Greene. He has written about early film for Sight & Sound and The Guardian, contributed to reference works and journals, and has recently co-authored Finding Birt Acres: The Rediscovery of a Film Pioneer for publication by University of Exeter Press in 2025. His blog William Friese-Greene & Me presents original research on early film history for a broad readership.

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Fumerie d'opium (1899) - Gabriel VeyreLa Nourrice (c. 1896-1900) - Georges MélièsThe Derby 1895 (1895) - Birt AcresYoung Griffo v. Battling Charles Barnett (1895) - Otway Latham"Untitled" (1890) - William Friese-GreeneNapoléon (1927) - Abel GanceRepas annamite (1899) - Gabriel VeyreLe village de Namo: panorama pris d’une chaise à porteurs (1900) - Gabriel VeyreThe Soldier's Courtship (1896) - Robert W. PaulPauvre Pierrot (1892) - Charles-Émile ReynaudWorkers Leaving the Lumière Factory (1895) - Louis LumièreThe Oxford and Cambridge University Boat Race (1895) - Birt AcresRough Sea at Dover (1895) - Birt AcresBullfight (1896) - Gray Latham and Eugène LausteThe Nichols Sisters (1895) - Otway LathamSidewalks of New York (1895) - Otway LathamChildren Dancing with Barrel Organ (1898) - Charles Goodwin NortonArrival of a Train at La Ciotat (1896) - Louis Lumière"Who? What? When? Where? A mini chronology of the start of cinema" - Peter Domankiewicz"Happy 125th Birthday, Cinema!" - Peter Domankiewicz

  • Bryony Dixon is the curator of silent film at the BFI National Archive and her picks for the 1800s reflect that expertise. Bryony discusses five British films that are emblematic of key developments in the earliest days of film, which align with the end of the Victorian era that she details in her book The Story of Victorian Film.

    Bryony is also the author of 100 Silent Films and has written numerous articles and book chapters on silent cinema and archiving. She is co-director of the British Silent Film Festival and has programmed films for many international festivals. She has been lead curator on a number of the BFI’s recent film restorations, including Underground (1928), Shooting Stars (1927), Epic of Everest (1924), The Great White Silence (1924), all nine surviving Hitchcock silent films, and the BFI’s large format Victorian films. Her Twitter is @bryonydixon.

    Visit https://www.the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own five favorites of the 1800s for a final tally in the season finale!

    Films and resources mentioned:
    Children Dancing with Barrel Organ (1898) - Charles Goodwin NortonSanta Claus (1898) - George Albert SmithPanoramic View of the Vegetable Market at Venice (1898) - William K.L. DicksonThe Miller and the Sweep (1897) - George Albert SmithLaunch of H.M.S. Albion (1898) - Robert W. PaulLaunch of H.M.S. Albion at Blackwall (1898) - E.P. PrestwichThe Battle of Midway (1942) - John FordHistory of the Kinetograph, Kinetoscope and Kinetophonograph - William K.L. Dickson and Antonia Dickson

  • Maggie Hennefeld, Professor of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, has literally written the book(s) on early cinematic feminist humor. Death by Laughter: Female Hysteria and Early Cinema and Specters of Slapstick and Silent Film Comediennes tackle similar themes to those explored in her five picks from the 1890s, which reveal the expansive possibilities of the earliest days of film, from anarchic comedy to those who worked behind the camera.

    Maggie is also a curator of the 4-disc DVD/Blu-ray collection Cinema's First Nasty Women and co-director of Archives on Screen, Twin Cities. Her socials are:
    Twitter: @magshenny
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hennefem/
    Bsky: https://bsky.app/profile/hennefem.bsky.social


    Visit https://www.the5bestfilmsofeveryyearever.com/list to submit your own five favorites of the 1800s for a final tally in the season finale!

    Films and resources mentioned:
    The Boxing Cats (1894) - William K.L. Dickson and William HeiseThe Cabbage Fairy (1896) - Alice Guy-BlachéThe Cabbage Fairy (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéSomething Good/Negro Kiss (1898) - William SeligThe Four Troublesome Heads (1898) - Georges MélièsThe Dairy Maid's Revenge (1899) - Frank S. ArmitageFredd Ott's Sneeze (1894) - William K.L. DicksonCarmencita (1894) - William K.L. DicksonSioux Ghost Dance (1894) - William K.L. DicksonBe Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché (2018) - Pamela B. GreenPierrette's Escapades (1900) - Alice Guy-BlachéAlgie, the Miner (1912) - Alice Guy-Blaché, Harry Schenk, and Edward WarrenThe Pill Pounder (1923) - Gregory La CavaMadame's Cravings (1907) - Alice Guy-BlachéMoonlight (2016) - Barry JenkinsIf Beale Street Could Talk (2018) - Barry JenkinsMary Jane's Mishap (1903) - George Albert SmithThe Man with the Rubber Head (1901) - Georges MélièsThe Big Swallow (1901) - James WilliamsonLéontine's Battery (1910) - Unknown"Do You Believe in Fairies? Cabbages, Victorian Memes, and the Birth of Cinema: Seeing Sapphic Sexuality in the Silent Era" - Kiki LovedayWomen Film Pioneers Project"The Cinema of Racialized Attraction(s): The John C. Rice–May Irwin Kiss and Something Good—Negro Kiss" - Allyson Nadia Field"The Cinema of Attraction[s]: Early Film, Its Spectator and the Avant-Garde" - Tom GunningSilent LondonThe Loft Cinema