ILLUSTRATIONS
- Getting Ready to take a Scene “On Location”
- Making use of a “Real” Incident
- The Scene the Audiences Saw
- Roping an Auto Bandit
- Taking “Close-Ups” on a Moving Auto
- A Movie “Miniature”
- A Snow Scene Made of Salt
- “Shooting” a Tramp on a Moving Train
- A Closer View of the Preceding “Take”
- Getting Thrills with a Balloon
- An Old Whaling Ship Refitted to Make a New Movie
- Capsized by a Real Whale
- Aiding Nature by a Skilful Fake
- Real Danger on the High Seas
- The Second Step to Safety
- A Douglas Fairbanks “Set” used in “The Three Musketeers”
- How a Movie “Set” is Made
- Applying the Mysteries of “Make-Up”
- A Typical Movie “Interior”
- Staging a Movie Prize-Fight
- How a Motion Picture Interior is Made
- Engine Trouble on a Dakota Prairie
- When the Hero is the Captain of a Steam Shovel
- Douglas Fairbanks as D’Artagnan in “The Three Musketeers”
- Another Scene from “The Three Musketeers”
- Filming an Old Engineer on a Fast-Moving Locomotive
- Another Railroad Scene
- Getting a Comedy Close-Up for a Laugh
- A “Location” where Reflectors are Essential
- Where Scenic Beauty is Required
- A Proposal on a Mountain Top
- Wrecking a Racing-Car for Sport
- Getting a Risky Bit of Action
- Actress, or a Victim of an Accident?
- Getting a real “Thriller”
- Drama on an Aëroplane
- A Gruesome Aëroplane Wreck
- Good Training in Cheerfulness
- Two Cameras Against One Pig
- Carrying an Elephant to a “Location”
- An Auto Load of Horses
- A Tête-à-Tête with a Lion
- Acting with a “Tame” Lion
- An Elephant on a Rampage
- Human Brains Against Brute Strength
- One of the Big Scenes in “Robin Hood”
- Spending Money on a “Spectacle”
- A “Western” Actor and His Favorite Horse
- “Westerns” are always Popular
- Archway from “The Three Musketeers”
- A Mexican Gateway from “Winners of the West”