E-mail us: amdb@ucalgary.ca


Hansel and Gretel

Date produced: 1932

Filmmaker(s):

Edward J. Hayes

Description:

"Hansel and Gretel, an amateur photoplay version of the fairy tale being produced by Edward J. Hayes, A.C.L., Orange, N.J." Movie Makers, May 1932, 224.


Happy Day

Date produced: 1934

Filmmaker(s):

T. Lawrenson

Description:

"In the Home Movie field, Lawrenson submitted a fine document of a day with his little 2-year-old daughter. The main portion is given over to a day at the seashore. But he gives reasons for everything he does even to going home. He shows a storm coming up and after the family has arrived safely at home, the little looks out of the window while the raindrops patter on the windowpane." American Cinematographer, Jan. 1936, 24.


Happy Days

Date produced: 1930

Filmmaker(s):

Roger Clapp

Description:

"Period piece of 1920's starring Roger Clapp and Dorothy Stebbins." Northeast Historic Film.


Happy Farm Woman

Date produced: 1937

Filmmaker(s):

George Oliver Smith

Description:

"It has a story with titles in verse telling how the farm woman compared herself with the Duchess of Windsor and decides she prefers Pa to the Duke and her own simple tasks to the life of a Duchess." American Cinematographer, Feb. 1940, 87.


Harbor

Date produced: 1935

Filmmaker(s):

James A. Sherlock

Description:

"From Australia James A. Sherlock sent 'Harbor,' a picture in Kodachrome. While the picture was well made, finely edited and cut, it suffered from uneven coloring and density. Undoubtedly much was taken with the earlier Kodachrome which darkened rapidly after it was exposed if it was not rushed to the processing plant." American Cinematographer, Feb. 1937, 73.


Harmony of the Bees

Date produced: 1949

Filmmaker(s):

C. H. Bacon

Description:

"Out of his personal experience, C. H. Bacon has produced an intimately documented film study of honey bees, both from the viewpoint of the keeper and that of the bees. Included are some extraordinary detail shots of life within the hive — the birth, life and death of a queen bee, construction of a hive, protection against natural enemies and the production of honey. Happy touches of light humor balance the more serious aspects of the subject, while the bear sequence at the end provides an amusing climax. Exceptionally well lighted and capably photographed, the picture provides entertaining and instructive screen fare." Movie Makers, Dec. 1949, 469-470.


Harold Carr and Others

Date produced: 1920

Filmmaker(s):

Thomas William Harris

Description:

"Footage of a day on the fells; the car pulls out of the driveway, followed by scenes of the landscape and family members." (NWFA Online Database)


Harvests of the Forest

Date produced: 1935

Filmmaker(s):

H. A. Burnford

Description:

"Burnford's picture was not only good from the documentary angle, but was very well photographed. It showed the lumbering industry in England starting with the felling of trees and then through the mills and then to the things built of wood, showing the most dramatic incidents." American Cinematographer, Feb. 1937, 73.

"Opens with various mature trees shown in full leaf. Men remove the bark from lower part of mature hardwoods and fell them with axes and long, two-man saws. Montage of falling trees. Bark prised from the fallen trunks. The torn-out root-base is sawn off and the trunks dragged from the forest by a team of heavy horses. The team drags the trunks onto the cart with the chain and the very largest trunks taken on a five-horse cart. At the lumber yard a large bandsaw divides the trunks in half and these are sliced. Men are show playing darts with the resulting, shaped, dartboards. SUB-TITLE - Harvest from over the seas. A ship - 'Karin Thorden' - docks, her decks stacked with timber already cut. Cranes transfer timber to barges, rafts and lorries. SUB-TITLE - For joinery. At the woodwork shop, specialised machines divide the wood into still smaller pieces and cut mortises and tenons and window frames are assembled. SUB-TITLE - For building. Workmen, on site, put up the roof timbers of a house. SUB-TITLE - For paper. Slow mixing of wood pulp. Smoothed out and rolled, dried and calendared. The large, wide rolls progress through the huge machines and sheets are slid off. SUB-TITLE - For music. Violin and Cello makers at work with hand tools, then a finished violin is played. SUB-TITLE - For flying. A bi-plane takes off. At the aeroplane factory, sections of the wooden wing frames are assembled, wing coverings doped. SUB-TITLE - For sailing. Large, J-class yachts tacking. J KI 7 featured. Finally, there are shots of mature, forest trees" (EAFA Database).


Harvey Hartburn Heads West

Date produced: 1970

Filmmaker(s):

Leon Paquette


Hasard [Chance]

Date produced: 1930

Filmmaker(s):

Pierre Boyer

Description:

Un homme trouve une lettre de rendez-vous destinée à une jeune femme qui, du correspondant, ne connaît que le nom d'emprunt. Tourné à Paris. A man finds a letter arranging a rendezvous intended for a young woman who only knows the correspondent's assumed name. Filmed in Paris.


Total Pages: 299