Dettagli frammento / Clip details

database
Back to List Indietro
Back
Nuova ricerca
New search
New Search
Back to Title Dettagli titolo
Title details
Invia commenti
Send your feedback
Feedback Form

   
Num. inventario del frammento
Clip inventory number
  6465
   

Titolo film
Film title
 
Titolo alternativo
Alternate title(s)
 
Titolo busta Turconi
Title on Turconi env.
  Demon
Casa di produzione
Production co.
 
Nazione
Country
 
Data di uscita
Release date
 
Regia
Director
 
Film conservato c/o
Film preserved at
 

Processi colorazione
Color processes
 
 
Tinted   Orange / Amber
 
 
 

Altri particolari
Other details
 
 

Scritte sui margini
Edge inscriptions
 

Manifatt. pellicola
Stock manufacturer
 
     
Catalogo Joye n.
Joye Catalogue no.
  x81
     
Totale frammenti
Total title clips
  119
 
Frammento conservato c/o
Fragment preserved at
  George Eastman House
     
Num. fotogrammi
Number of frames
  2

Note / Notes
See 6443...6480, 13826...13834, 20320...20349.

GEH 6443...6480:

[n. X 81
potreble essere Demon di Tamarerd e Korffus
fotografie Vitrotti]

Pavia 13826...13834:
[x 81
Demon]

Friuli 20320...20349:
Transferred from Ines’s Filemaker Pro CD

[N. 122 x
816 II / x 13
x 81 I ambiente russo Pathé ?]

Mounted in slide frames (Cineteca del Friuli)

As written in slide box, film is [x 81] group [I][ambiente russo] See A0156...A0168 [x 81] group [II] [ambiente russo Karamazof?] and A0137...A0138, same film. See also 6443...6480 [n. x 81] [potreble essere Demon di Tamarerd e Korffus fotografie Vitrotti], same film found in an envelope.

Options for identification:
-[Demon]: Reference to adaptation of Mikhail Lermontov’s poem “Demon” directed by Giovanni Vitrotti and F. Korfus in 1911. Photography also by Vitrotti. Produced by Ambrosio. BFI lists title in their web. See Bernardini and Martinelli’s ”Il Cinema Muto Italiano 1911” (p.148-150), images in book do not seem to match these frames.
-[Karamazof?]: Reference to adaptation of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novel “The Brothers Karamazov” Earliest adaptation found: “Die Brüder Karamasoff” (1920), BFI lists title in their web. See G. Lamprecht’s “Deutsche Stummfilme 1920” (p.205)
-[Demon] +[ Karamazof?]: Combined references could point at an adaptation of Dostoevsky’s “Demons” (also translated as “The Possessed” or “The Devils”) No early film adaptations found. -ITT

Commenti, aggiunte e correzioni / Comments, additions and corrections