George Albert Smith
Director
34
Movies
0
TV Shows
Along with his better-known French counterpart Georges Méliès, George Albert Smith, usually credited as G.A. Smith, was one of the first filmmakers to explore fictional and fantastic themes, often using surprisingly sophisticated special effects. His background was ideal – an established portrait photographer, he also had a long-standing interest in show business, running a tourist attraction in his native Brighton featuring a fortune teller. His films were among the first to feature such innovations as superimposition (Smith patented a double-exposure system in 1897), close-ups and scene transitions involving wipes and focus pulls. He also patented Kinemacolor – the world's first commercial cinema color system--in 1906, which was extremely successful for a time, despite the special equipment required to project it
Behind the Camera
The Kiss in the Tunnel
Director, Productor, Dir. de Fotografía
As Seen Through a Telescope
Dir. de Fotografía, Productor, Director
Grandma's Reading Glass
Productor, Director
Le couronnement du roi Édouard VII
Camera Operator
Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes
Director, Productor
The Sick Kitten
Director
The Inexhaustible Cab
Director
Tartans of Scottish Clans
Director
Comic Face
Director
The Death of Poor Joe
Director
Cinderella
Director
Mary Jane's Mishap
Director, Productor
Venice and the Grand Canal
Director
Santa Claus
Director
Brighton Seagoing Electric Car
Director
The X-Ray Fiend
Director, Escritor, Productor, Diseño de Producción
Train Entering Hove Station
Director, Productor
Weary Willie
Director
Two Clowns
Director
Policeman and Burglar
Director
Grandma Threading Her Needle
Director
The Old Maid's Valentine
Director
Sir Hiram Maxim's Captive Flying Machines
Director
Two Old Sports
Director
Animated Doll and Toy Town Circus
Director
The House That Jack Built
Director
Old London Street Scenes
Director
The Miller and the Sweep
Director
Early British Films from the Filmoteca de Catalunya 1897-1909
Director
Let Me Dream Again
Director