Silent

  • Yasujirô Ozu – Tokkan kozô AKA A Straightforward Boy (1929)

    Yasujiro Ozu1921-1930ComedyJapanSilent
    Tokkan kozô (1929)
    Tokkan kozô (1929)

    Quote:
    One of the earliest surviving silent comedies by master filmmaker Yasujiro Ozu, A Straightforward Boy is a rambunctious, adorable kidnapping caper now screening in a new restoration that restores to it eight long-lost and recently rediscovered minutes. The short features one of the all-time great child actors, Tomio Aoki, at age six and in his first starring role as the titular boy all too happy to be abducted – so long as his petty-crook captors (Tatsuo Saitô and Takeshi Sakamoto) are willing to endure his company. Aoki’s extraordinary career would go on to include over 300 films, from Ozu’s 1932 I Was Born, But… to Seijun Suzuki’s 2001 Pistol Opera.Read More »

  • Frank Lloyd – The Sea Hawk (1924)

    Frank Lloyd1921-1930AdventureSilentUSA
    The Sea Hawk (1924)
    The Sea Hawk (1924)

    A stirring tale of romance and deception staged on an epic scale by director Frank Lloyd, The Sea Hawk (1924) captures the majesty and vigor of silent cinema at its most spectacular. Based on the novel by Rafael Sabatini, the author of Scaramouche and Captain Blood, the film is a swashbuckling epic of the highest order, spanning several years and continents as it tells the story of Oliver Tressilian, a British nobleman falsely accused of murder, and dramatizes his valiant efforts to restore honor to his name.Read More »

  • Abram Room – Yevrei na zemle aka Jews on the Land (1927)

    Abram Room1921-1930DramaSilentSoviet silent cinemaUSSR
    Yevrei na zemle (1927)
    Yevrei na zemle (1927)

    Quote:
    A 20-minute documentary of Jewish settlement in the Yevpatoria district of the Crimea. Exhibiting a certain amount of Jewish irony, Jews on the Land opens with scenes of a war-devastated shtetl (all that is left of the central market is a single pathetic fish stall), than shows an elderly Jew wandering about an even more desolate wilderness. Soon, however, sod-brick settlements rise and, as irrigation ditch criss-cross the once –barren plain, the now- productivised Jews are equally transformed: a new-born baby is named Forget-You-Sorrow. Tractor drivers and Young Pioneers’ are given particular pride of place and the film-makers emphasise that, among other livestock, these new Jewish peasants are raising pigs.
    “Inside the film factory” by Richard Taylor, Ian ChristieRead More »

  • D.W. Griffith – The Golden Supper (1910)

    D.W. Griffith1901-1910DramaSilentUSA
    The Golden Supper (1910)
    The Golden Supper (1910)

    Quote:
    Lionel and Julian both love Camilla, but she marries Lionel. After half a year, she falls ill and dies. Julian visits her in the tomb, and kissing her hand seems to bring her back to life. Back at the palace, Lionel is nowhere to be found. His heartbreak has prompted him to become a hermit. When Julian sees how Camilla is suffering from Lionel’s absence, he decides to look for him. During a golden feast in honour of Camilla’s return, Lionel comes home. After a touching reunion, the generous Julian once again remains alone.Read More »

  • Herbert Wilcox – Nell Gwynne (1926)

    Herbert Wilcox1921-1930EpicSilentUSA
    Nell Gwynne (1926)
    Nell Gwynne (1926)

    An actress becomes the king’s mistress and persuades him to convert the palace to a servicemen’s home.Read More »

  • Unknown – Der Heimat Schützengraben AKA Our Homeland’s Trenches (1916)

    Germany1911-1920SilentWar
    Der Heimat Schützengraben (1916)
    Der Heimat Schützengraben (1916)

    Felicity Rash wrote:
    During the war years, film developed as a novel and effective vehicle for primary and secondary war propaganda. Visual images of a heroic Self and a terrifying enemy Other were a popular means of conveying a nationalist message and boosting patriotic sentiment. […] In Der Heimat Schützengraben (1916) a farmer newly returned from the East Prussian front tells of the horror he experienced when fleeing from Russian soldiers. His story brings him sympathy from a group of villagers from whom he is requesting a loan. At the end of the film, children are shown opening up their piggy-banks. An old man makes an emotional speech to the villagers, and hence the film’s audience, telling them to lend money to the state …Read More »

  • Tod Browning – The Mystic (1925)

    Tod Browning1921-1930CrimeSilentUSA
    The Mystic (1925)
    The Mystic (1925)

    A fantastically atmospheric but rarely seen missing link in the development of Tod Browning’s artistry, set amid his favored milieu of shadowy sideshows and clever criminals, The Mystic provides a striking showcase for silent-era diva Aileen Pringle, who sports a series of memorably outré looks (courtesy of art deco designer Erté) as Zara, a phony psychic in a Hungarian carnival who, under the guidance of a Svengali-like con man (Conway Tearle), crashes—and proceeds to swindle—American high society. Browning’s fascination with the weird is on full display in the eerie séance sequences, while his subversive moral ambiguity extends surprising sympathy to even the most seemingly irredeemable of antiheroes.Read More »

  • Léonce Perret – Le mystère des roches de Kador (1913)

    Léonce Perret1911-1920DramaFranceSilent
    Le mystère des roches de Kador (1913)
    Le mystère des roches de Kador (1913)

    Synopsis: Fernand de Kéranic wants to eliminate his cousin and ward in order to receive her inheritance.Read More »

  • Stellan Rye & Paul Wegener – Der Student von Prag AKA The Student of Prague (1913)

    Stellan Rye1911-1920FantasyGermanyPaul WegenerSilent
    Der Student von Prag (1913)
    Der Student von Prag (1913)

    Synopsis
    A poor student rescues a beautiful countess and soon becomes obsessed with her. A sorcerer makes a deal with the young man to give him fabulous wealth and anything he wants, if he will sign his name to a contract. The student hurriedly signs the contract, but doesn’t know what he’s in for…Read More »

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