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- Cinema_of_Europe abstract "Cinema of Europe refers to the film industries and films produced in the continent of Europe.Europeans were the pioneers of the motion picture industry, with several innovative engineers and artists making an impact especially at the end of the 19th century. Louis Le Prince became famous for his 1888 Roundhay Garden Scene, the first known celluloid film recorded. The Skladanowsky brothers from Berlin used their "Bioscop" to amaze the Wintergarten theatre audience with the first film show ever, from November 1 through 31, 1895. The Lumière Brothers established the Cinematograph; which initiated the silent film era, a period where European cinema was a major commercial success. It remained so until the art-hostile environment of World War II.Notable European early film movements include German Expressionism (1920s), French Impressionist Cinema (1920s), Poetic realism (1930s), and Italian neorealism (1940s); it was a period now seen in retrospect as "The Other Hollywood". The first large-scale film studio was also established in Europe, with the Babelsberg Studio near Berlin in 1912.Post World War II movements include Free Cinema (1950s), French New Wave (1950s–60s), Polish Film School (1950s–60s), Czechoslovak New Wave (1960s), New German Cinema (1960s–80s), British New Wave (1950s–60s), Spaghetti Western (1960s) and Novo Cinema (1960s–70s). The turn of the 21st century has seen movements such as Dogme 95, New French Extremity, Romanian New Wave and Berlin School.".
- Cinema_of_Europe thumbnail Bundesarchiv_Bild_146-1988-035-15,_Berlin,_Wintergarten.jpg?width=300.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink 7-surprising-european-films-foreign-territories.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink search.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink www.cineuropa.org.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink www.ecrf.org.uk.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink www.efp-online.com.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink index.php.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink top-10-movies-from-spain.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink www.obs.coe.int.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink film.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageExternalLink Letter40_English_Translation.pdf.
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageID "3265315".
- Cinema_of_Europe wikiPageRevisionID "600576329".
- Cinema_of_Europe hasPhotoCollection Cinema_of_Europe.
- Cinema_of_Europe subject Category:Cinema_by_continent.
- Cinema_of_Europe subject Category:European_cinema.
- Cinema_of_Europe subject Category:History_of_film.
- Cinema_of_Europe comment "Cinema of Europe refers to the film industries and films produced in the continent of Europe.Europeans were the pioneers of the motion picture industry, with several innovative engineers and artists making an impact especially at the end of the 19th century. Louis Le Prince became famous for his 1888 Roundhay Garden Scene, the first known celluloid film recorded.".
- Cinema_of_Europe label "Cinema of Europe".
- Cinema_of_Europe label "Cinéma européen".
- Cinema_of_Europe label "Кинематограф Европы".
- Cinema_of_Europe sameAs Cinéma_européen.
- Cinema_of_Europe sameAs m.0925s1.
- Cinema_of_Europe sameAs Q993246.
- Cinema_of_Europe sameAs Q993246.
- Cinema_of_Europe wasDerivedFrom Cinema_of_Europe?oldid=600576329.
- Cinema_of_Europe depiction Bundesarchiv_Bild_146-1988-035-15,_Berlin,_Wintergarten.jpg.
- Cinema_of_Europe isPrimaryTopicOf Cinema_of_Europe.