Passage de Venus (1874) , Roundhay Garden Scene (1888) & Georges Méliès - The Haunted Castle (1896).
First Films Ever Made :
Passage de Venus (1874) - Pierre Jules César Janssen - Photographic sequence of 1874 passage of Venus over the face of the sun, it was the first-ever moving picture.
Roundhay Garden Scene (1888) - Louis Le Prince - The Roundhay Garden Scene was recorded at 12 frames per second and runs for 2.11 seconds. It is the oldest surviving film in existence and the first moving picture ever made using film and a camera, noted by the Guinness Book of Records. This sequence was filmed by Louis Le Prince in October 1888 using paper base photographic film and his single-lens combi camera-projector. According to Le Prince's son, Adolphe, it was filmed at the home of Joseph and Sarah Whitley in Leeds, England on October 14, 1888. Louis Le Prince was an inventor who created the first moving pictures using film and a single-lens camera. His films were created several years before the work of competing inventors such as Auguste, Louis Lumière and Thomas Edison. Le Prince was never able to perform a planned public demonstration in the United States because he mysteriously vanished from a train on September 16, 1890.
Georges Méliès - The Haunted Castle (1896) - Le Manoir du diable or The House of the Devil, released in the United States as The Haunted Castle and in Britain as The Devil's Castle, is an 1896 French short silent film directed by Georges Méliès.The film, which depicts a brief pantomimed sketch in the style of a theatrical comic fantasy, tells the story of an encounter with the Devil and various attendant phantoms. It is intended to evoke amusement and wonder from its audiences, rather than fear. However, because of its themes and characters, the film has been considered to technically be the first horror film. Such a classification can also be attributed to the film's depiction of a human transforming into a bat, a plot element which has led some observers to label the work the first vampire film.The film is also innovative in length; its running time of over three minutes was ambitious for its era.
A single remake was produced one year later under the title Le Château hanté (The Haunted Castle), which is often confused with this film.
The film was presumed lost until 1988, when a copy was found in the New Zealand Film Archive.
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