mdblist.com logo The Best Alice Guy-Blaché Movies. Go to The Best Shows


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poster
Kanopy
78
7.7
/1240/
74
/60/
72
/39/
3.8
/4276/
96
/89/
96
/141/
76
/13/

Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché (2018)
The epic life story of Alice Guy-Blaché (1873–1968), a French screenwriter, director and producer, true pioneer of cinema, the first person who made a narrative fiction film; author of hundreds of movies, but banished from history books. Ignored and forgotten. At last remembered.
poster
51
33
5.4
/1566/
55
/70/
52
/96/
3.2
/8257/
33
/14/

The Cabbage-Patch Fairy (1896)
A brief fantasy tale involving a strange fairy who can produce and deliver babies coming out of cabbages. This film is lost. Copies of it online are actually the 1900 remake.
poster
54
10
6.0
/240/
52
/7/
60
/9/
3.4
/777/
Popcorn
30
/1/

Alice Guy Films a 'Phonoscène' in the Studio at Buttes-Chaumont, Paris (1907)
Behind-the-scenes footage showing Alice Guy directing an early sound film.
poster
60
9
6.1
/197/
58
/8/
56
/12/
3.3
/367/

Spain (1905)
This is a compilation of some of the films that Alice Guy filmed in Spain from mid-October to the end of November, 1905 (catalogue numbers 1371 to 1384) that were individually released in early 1906.
poster
Hoopla
69
?
7.4
/103/
60
/7/
71
/8/
3.6
/365/

The Women Who Run Hollywood (2016)
The first talkie was directed by Alice Guy, the first color film was produced by Lois Weber, who directed more than 300 films over 10 years. Frances Marion wrote screenplays for the Hollywood Star Mary Pickford and won two Oscars, Dorothy Arzner was the most powerful film director in Hollywood. And what do all of them have in common? They are all women and they have all been forgotten. Incredibly, it also took until 2010 for the first woman, Kathryn Bigelow, to win the Oscar for Best Director. Even if underrepresented women have always played a big part in Hollywood and it is this part of the film history left untold that this documentary sets out to uncover.
poster
?
7.7
/54/
76
/3/
72
/10/

Alice Guy, the First Female Filmmaker (2021)
Who, apart from moviegoers, knows Alice Guy (1873-1968) today? However, she was the first woman behind the camera and the first female director and producer of fiction films in history.
poster
64
?
7.1
/106/
60
/7/
61
/5/

The Lost Garden: The Life and Cinema of Alice Guy-Blaché (1995)
A biodoc about the first female filmmaker and her relative disappearance from the history of cinema after directing, producing, and writing more than 700 films.
poster
Hoopla
?
30
/1/

Mireille (1906)
"Mireille" was filmed at the end of May, 1906, by a small team including Alice Guy, Herbert Blaché, Louis Feuillade and Yvonne Mugnier-Serand at the estate of the Marquis Folco de Baroncelli-Javon in Camargue, during their visit to Nîmes to attend the Gran Corrida organized by the local press association. Ultimately, the film never saw the light of day due to technical problems. (Maurice Gianati et Laurent Mannoni (dir.), Alice Guy, Léon Gaumont et les débuts du film sonore, New Barnet, John Libbey Publishing, 2012, p. 45).
poster
?

Qui est Alice Guy? (1976)
A compelling investigation aimed at restoring the legacy of a fundamental yet often overlooked figure: Alice Guy, the first female director in history. Utilizing rare archival materials and staged scenes depicting moments from her life, the film traces the career of this pioneer who played a key role in the transition of cinema into a narrative medium. The work goes beyond celebrating her technical milestones —such as her early experiments with sound or the founding of an independent production company in the United States— to offer a sharp critique of the historical silence and erasure imposed on her work by scholars and film archives. Ultimately, the documentary serves as a necessary act of rediscovery to uncover the deep roots of female creativity in the cinematic world and challenges the traditional narratives that have long excluded women as active creative forces
poster
?

A Solax Celebration (1912)
N/A
poster
?
3.5
/12/

Animated Portrait Shot by L and A Lumière (1895)
An early Kinora demonstration film.


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