Top 7 Best Films from Europe
- The Machine Man [L'homme machine] Director: Étienne-Jules Marey
- Athlete Swinging a Pick Director: Eadweard Muybridge
- The Magic Rosette [La rosace magique] Director: Émile Reynaud
- Transit of Venus [Passage de Vénus] Director: Pierre Janssen
- Horse and Rider Jumping Over an Obstacle [Pferd und Reiter springen über ein Hindernis] Director: Ottomar Anschütz
- Man Walking Around the Corner Director: Louis Le Prince
- The Musician Monkey [Le singe musicien] Director: Émile Reynaud
France (formerly French Republic) | Western Europe | Europe
1885 | 1880s | 19th Century
Étienne-Jules Marey's "The Machine Man" (1895) is a curious animation for its time. On the one hand its tricks are meant to serve a technical purpose, on the other its style resembles the not yet discovered stylism of post modern art: the human reduced to just a linear silhouette on a white canvas.
United Kingdom (formerly United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland) | Northern Europe | Europe
1881 | 1880s | 19th Century
Eadweard Muybridge went down to his bare skin in "Athlete Swinging a Pick" (1881) in order to show the full force of a human being that can be achieved through movement. Combining physiology and myth, this is also a first attempt at exposing how the camera can fake reality into fiction.
France (formerly French Republic) | Western Europe | Europe
1877 | 1870s | 19th Century
In its day, the moving images in Émile Reynaud's ""The Magic Rosette"" (1877) must have felt more exciting than some of the current developments in AI technology. Ground-breaking in form and content, this is one of the few pre-cinema works of art that possess true magic within them.
France (formerly French Republic) | Western Europe | Europe
1874 | 1870s | 19th Century
Pierre Janssen allowed the world to gaze at stellar objects for the first time on film in ""Transit of Venus"" (1874). He gave hope that one day images in motion can become part of our quest to understanding the world that we inhabit. The series of photographs set the race for the discovery of cinema.
Germany (formerly German Empire) | Western Europe | Europe
1888 | 1880s | 19th Century
Ottomar Anschütz is less known amongst the early inventors in cinematic history, yet his foray in chronophotography boasts sharp images, comparable, if not better, to those by Marey or Muybridge. "Horse and Rider Jumping over an Obstacle" (1888) captured the Prussian Army with military precision.
United Kingdom (formerly United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland) | Northern Europe | Europe
1887 | 1880s | 19th Century
In time, "Man Walking Around the Corner" (1887) stays as just one simple, yet ambitious, experiment. Louis Aimé Augustin Le Prince's 16-lens camera is a significant milestone towards the discovery of film, and its output is without question an important artifact in the archaeology of cinema.
France (formerly French Republic) | Western Europe | Europe
1878 | 1870s | 19th Century
Émile Reynaud's animated work predates the successes in moving photography. ""The Musician Monkey"" (1878) is charming and simultaneously creepy in its visuals, nonetheless through its movement it announced to the world that pictures were no longer still.