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  1. Their first films (they made more than 40 during 1896) recorded everyday French life—e.g., the arrival of a train, a game of cards, a toiling blacksmith, the feeding of a baby, soldiers marching, the activity of a city street.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 3 de out. de 2014 · A three-in-one device that could record, develop and project motion pictures, the Cinématographe would go down in history as the first viable film camera. Using it, the Lumière brothers...

    • Sarah Pruitt
  3. The brothers patented their own version on 13 February 1895. The date of the recording of their first film is in dispute. In an interview with Georges Sadoul given in 1948, Louis claimed that he shot the film in August 1894 – before the arrival of the kinetoscope in France.

  4. 22 de fev. de 2019 · Pioneers in motion. In 1894 Antoine attended a Paris exhi­bition of Thomas Edison and William Dickson’s Kinetoscope, a film-viewing device often referred to as the first mov­ie projector....

    • 2 min
    • Pedro García Martín
  5. The Lumière brothersfirst film (in fact, they made three versions) was shot outside their factory as the workers left at the end of the day. It was shown to the Société d’Encouragement à l’Industrie Nationale in Paris on 22 March 1895: this was probably the first public screening of moving pictures (the Lathams’ first public ...

  6. The Lumière Brothers' First Films: With Mrs. Auguste Lumiere, Antoine Lumière, Auguste Lumière, Bertrand Tavernier. A collection of short films made by the Lumiere brothers, a team of pioneering filmmakers in turn-of-the-century France.

  7. In fact, it was a Kinetoscope exhibition in Paris that inspired the Lumière brothers, Auguste and Louis, to invent the first commercially viable projector. Their cinématographe , which functioned as a camera and printer as well as a projector, ran at the economical speed of 16 frames per second.