Rip Van Winkle is a 1903 American short black-and-white silent compilation film written and directed by William K.L. Dickson adapted from the play by his friend and investor Joseph Jefferson with Dion Boucicault based on the story of the same name by Washington Irving, featuring Joseph Jefferson as a ne'er-do-well, who wanders off one day into the Kaatskill mountains where he runs into an odd group of men, drinks some of their mysterious brew and passes out only to wake up to find 20 years have passed. The film is compiled from a series of films produced in 1896, which consisted of;
Rip's Toast (AM&B Cat. #45)
Rip Meets the Dwarf (AM&B Cat. #46)
Rip and the Dwarf
Rip Leaving Sleepy Hollow (AM&B Cat. #52)
Rip's Toast to Hudson and Crew
Rip's Twenty Years' Sleep (AM&B Cat. #50)
Awakening of Rip
Rip Passing Over Hill
These films were added to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 1995 and featured on the DVD release More Treasures from American Film Archives, 1894-1931.
Il y a 2 films ayant les mêmes acteurs, 41 films avec le même réalisateur, 4292 films qui ont les mêmes thèmes, pour avoir au final 70 suggestions de films similaires.
Si vous avez aimé Rip Van Winkle, vous aimerez sûrement les films similaires suivants :
, 1h30 Réalisé parVictor Saville OrigineRoyaume-uni GenresComédie, Musical, Romance ThèmesLa musique, Théâtre, Musique, Adaptation d'une pièce de théâtre ActeursJessie Matthews, Sonnie Hale, Betty Balfour, Barry MacKay, Hartley Power, Norma Varden Note65% Set in the Edwardian era music halls of London, the popular singing star Harriet Green (Jessie Matthews) delights audiences with her coy rendition of Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me a Bow Wow; however she has an illegitimate baby daughter that she keeps secret from the public. Blackmailed into leaving the stage she moves to South Africa to raise her daughter quietly. Years later her daughter, Harriet Hawkes (played by Matthews again), looking remarkably like her mother, returns to London as a young show-biz hopeful. A handsome young publicity man Tommy Thompson (Barry MacKay), convinces a theater producer (Sonnie Hale) to star her in a new revue as the "remarkably preserved" original Harriet Green. The ruse works; however Harriet and Tommy have fallen in love, but the public believes Harriet is a well-preserved 60-year-old and Tommy is her son. The masquerade is revealed when Harriet does a strip-dance to the Harry M. Woods song Over My Shoulder.