Аватар персоны Charles Urban

Charles Urban

DirectorProducer
Charles Urban is an American producer, director, cinematographer and editor born April 14, 1867 in Cincinnati, Ohio (United States), died August 29, 1942 in Brighton (United Kingdom). Urban made many types of non-fiction films at the Charles Urban Trading Company, including travel films, war reports, exploration films, sports films, commercials and natural history films. Filmmakers who worked for him include Jack Avery, Joseph Rosenthal, Charles Rider Noble, Harold Mease Lomas, mountaineer Frank Ormiston-Smith, George Rogers, J. Gregory Mantle, and naturalist F. Percy Smith. Smith directed one of Urban's most successful films, The Balancing Bluebottle (1908), which featured a fly balancing objects such as a wine cork with its legs. In 1906, George Albert Smith and Charles Urban created a new process in England, Kinémacolor, which recreated the impression of (partial) colors in cinema. Marketed at the beginning of 1911, the process was used in some 250 short films. In Paris, in 1913, Charles Urban built the Théâtre Édouard VII, which was above all a cinema using Kinémacolor. He sold his room to Alphonse Franck the following year. Urban remained in the United States after the war to re-establish himself as a producer of educational films through his umbrella company, Urban Motion Picture Industries Inc. He produced the Charles cinemagazine series Urban Movie Chats (launched in 1919) and Kineto Review (launched 1921), and made the feature documentaries The Four Seasons (1921) and Evolution (1923). He built a large studio in Irvington, New York, where he planned to introduce a new color film system called Kinekrom, based on the old Kinemacolor, and to distribute educational films on disc using the Spirograph. However, his business interests collapsed in 1924 and he returned to the UK in the late 1920s. He died in Brighton in 1942, aged 75.

15-04-1867

Birthday

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Genres

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Total Films

Also known as (male)

Cincinnati, Ohio, USA

Place of Birth

Popular works

Creative career

actor

0 Works

producer

22 Works

director

34 Works

writer

0 Works

other

3 Works

Fight for the Dardanelles

Fight for the Dardanelles

The film uses stop-frame animation to create maps on the screen, and showed the then-current military situation in the Dardanelles, using various maps to assist understanding. Small cardboard cut-outs show the deployment of men and ships. Intertitles explain tactics, and shelling explosions are illustrated by clouds of cotton wool.
0.0

Year:

1915

The World, the Flesh and the Devil

The World, the Flesh and the Devil

An intensely unhappy woman hatches a plot to switch the babies of a poor family and a rich family. But the nurse hired to pull off this transfer refuses to go through with it, leaving each baby with its proper family. When the babies are grown, the man from the poor family (who has been led to believe that he did come from the rich family) goes to the house of the other and throws him out. The remainder of the film deals with the frustrations of mistaken identity.
0.0

Year:

1914

The Pageant Procession

The Pageant Procession

From With Our King and Queen Through India
0.0

Year:

1912

Varieties of Sweet Peas

Varieties of Sweet Peas

An early British Kinemacolor short, in which delicate tones and shades of color are beautifully reproduced in examples of highly cultivated sweet pea flowers.
0.0

Year:

1911

The Aerial Anarchists

The Aerial Anarchists

Anarchists build a super aircraft and bomb a railway, a fort and St. Paul's.
0.0

Year:

1911

A Run with the Exmoor Staghounds

A Run with the Exmoor Staghounds

Kinemacolor
0.0

Year:

1911

Building a British Railway: Constructing the Locomotive

Building a British Railway: Constructing the Locomotive

Documentary short released in 1911.
0.0

Year:

1911

Trilby and Svengali

Trilby and Svengali

British adaptation of Trilby filmed in Kinemacolor. Presumed lost.
0.0

Year:

1911

Banks of the Nile

Banks of the Nile

With a dual motion a cruise ship and a fishing boat pass one another on the Nile and butlers in turbans set up a wooden gangway. Thanks to a rope and pulley system cows climb skywards then disappear into the hold of the sailing vessel. On the bank, black-haired women rock back and forth, bursting out laughing and showing the first signs of going into a state of trance. Never-before filmed gestures and faces of the people of the Nile succeed one another, uprooted to an unknown, magical world. The Banks of the Nile is one of the first experiments of film in colour that uses the Kinemacolor process.
5.0

Year:

1911

The Birth of a Flower

The Birth of a Flower

"Percy Smith (1880-1944) was world famous as a photographer of plant life. Probably the first British example of time-lapse photography as applied to the growth of plants." Monthly Film Bulletin, November 1955.
6.6

Year:

1910

The Aerial Submarine

The Aerial Submarine

Using a futuristic submarine, pirates kidnap a young couple, torpedo a passenger ship, travel under the sea to salvage bullion, then make their escape by taking to the air.
4.5

Year:

1910

Fording the River

Fording the River

Kinemacolor
0.0

Year:

1910

Lake Garda, Italy

Lake Garda, Italy

Kinemacolor
0.0

Year:

1910

A Dash to the North Pole

A Dash to the North Pole

This film footage of the Ziegler North Pole expedition was reissued in Britain by Charles Urban in 1909 when all things Polar were of almost obsessive interest to the British film-going public.
0.0

Year:

1909

The Harvest

The Harvest

Kinemacolor
0.0

Year:

1908

Hackenschmidt-Rogers [The Great Wrestling Match]

Hackenschmidt-Rogers [The Great Wrestling Match]

Documents one of the most important wrestling matches of the early 20th century between the legendary Estonian strongman Georg Hackenschmidt and the American Joe Rogers. Originally filmed in February 1908 and produced by the well-known Charles Urban, this rare footage is a significant find that offers an authentic glimpse into the golden age of wrestling. The only known film footage of a wrestling match featuring the legendary Estonian wrestler Georg Hackenschmidt, who wins this two-round title match.
0.0

Year:

1908

The Arlberg Railway

The Arlberg Railway

In 1906, the Arlberg Railway, which connects the Austrian cities of Innsbruck and Bludenz, is the only east-west mountain railway in Austria. This 340-second "ghost railroad ride" shows the view from the back of a train, though I'm not sure if it's heading east or west. This kind of film, in vogue at the time, is an intermediate form of short reality, which often showed a train engaging in a bend, and a feature documentary. Its editing is live, linear and temporal, and the cuts are very apparent. Indeed, the choices of where to place the cuts seem to have avoided the less populated stretches. There are plenty of buildings to see, even when the train is not at the station.
10.0

Year:

1906

Venice and the Grand Canal

Venice and the Grand Canal

View of the Grand Canal in Venice from a boat believed to have been made in either 1901 or 1904 and as part of the series "Through Italy with the Bioscope" by George Albert Smith and Charles Urban.
0.0

Year:

1904

The Coronation of Edward VII

The Coronation of Edward VII

King Edward VII's coronation ceremony.
4.7

Year:

1902

Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race

Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race

This picture, taken from Thorneycroft's Yard, shows the two boats about twelve lenghts apart - a state of things owing to terrible weather in which the race was rowed. It is a very comprehensive view of the contest and a good photograph despite the very trying conditions under which it was produced.
0.0

Year:

1900