Silent

  • Raúl Perrone – P3ND3JO5 (2013)

    2011-2020ArgentinaMusicalRaúl PerroneSilent

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    Skater musical from Buenos Aires suburb. In this silent black-and-white 4:3 format film, the hypnotising soundtrack drives the images. Love, desire, drama, faces. Perrone, the godfather of Argentine independent cinema, reinvents it in his 35th film.

    Argentinian director Raúl Perrone calls P3ND3JO5 (‘pendejos’: slang for teen, but also idiot or worse epithets) a ‘cumbia opera in three acts with coda’. Cumbia is rhythmic Columbian music that became immensely popular in Latin America during the 1940s.
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  • Polidor – Polidor e la parrucca (1917)

    1911-1920ComedyItalyPolidorSilentThe Birth of Cinema

    Plot:
    The little Agenore (Ferdinande Guillaume) combines a lot of trouble to family friend Ilario Mentecatti (Natale Guillaume).(European Film Gateway)Read More »

  • Polidor – Tontolini è triste (1911)

    1911-1920ComedyItalyPolidorSilentThe Birth of Cinema

    Plot
    Disappointed by love, Tontolini consults a doctor about the sadness he feels. The doctor prescribes distractions and entertainment as a cure. Tontolini accepts the doctor’s advice and begins the cure by going to café chantants and theaters, where he finds nothing but moving performances that make him even sadder. (European Film Gateway)Read More »

  • Charles Tutelier – La Belgique martyre AKA The martyrdom of Belgium (1919)

    1911-1920BelgiumCharles TutelierSilentThe Birth of CinemaWarWorld War One

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Plot
    A young Flemish peasant experiences the brutal side of war after his father has left to fight at the battle front of the Yser, his mother has been executed by German soldiers and his grandfather has been sent to an internment camp. He decides to take up arms and joins the Belgian army to avenge his mother’s death… (EFG)Read More »

  • Charles Chaplin – The Gold Rush (1925)

    USA1921-1930Charles ChaplinComedySilent

    Dave Kehr, Chicago Reader wrote:
    Charles Chaplin’s best-loved film, with the tramp down-and-out (as usual) in Alaska, where he looks for gold, falls in love with a dance-hall girl (Georgia Hale), eats his shoes for Thanksgiving dinner, and ends up a millionaire. The blend of slapstick and pathos is seamless, although the cynicism of the final scene is still surprising. Chaplin’s later films are quirkier and more personal, but this is quintessential Charlie, and unmissable. The film has been issued in several different forms with different sound tracks and cuts, including a 72-minute version butchered by Chaplin himself in the 40s. Hold out for the 1925 original, which runs 82 minutes.Read More »

  • Victor Sjöström – He Who Gets Slapped (1924)

    1921-1930ClassicsSilentUSAVictor Sjöström

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Sandra Brennan at allmovie.com wrote:
    This compelling and exceptionally well-executed silent drama, from new MGM studio executives Irving Thalburg and producer Louis B. Mayer is based on a highly-regarded Russian play and features the studio’s biggest stars, Lon Chaney, John Gilbert and Norma Shearer. Directed by noted Swedish filmmmaker Victor Sjostrom, it is the story of a scientific genius who is humiliated by his philandering wife and a major career set-back. To express his pain, bitterness and anger he becomes a circus clown who seems to enjoy the frequently cruel slapstick antics of his new colleagues. While in the circus, he finds a chance at renewal when he falls for a lovely bareback rider. But will he at last find happiness? Or will tragedy continue to be his closest companion?Read More »

  • George Herriman – Krazy Kat – Bugologist (1916)

    1911-1920AnimationGeorge HerrimanSilentUSA

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    Krazy Kat and Ignatz set out for the wilds on Krazy’s bike; Krazy’s promises to teach Ignatz about bugology. After crashing the bike into a tree, they come upon a bee (Krazy says it’s sleeping, Ignatz says it’s dead) and an elephant. Krazy works his magic on one of them, Ignatz on the other. Hearts swell inside the animals’ chests.
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  • Herbert Blaché & Winchell Smith – The Saphead (1920)

    1911-1920ComedyHerbert BlachéSilentUSAWinchell Smith

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    The Saphead is a 1920 comedy film featuring Buster Keaton. It was the actor’s first starring role in a full-length feature and the film that launched his career.

    The plot was a merging of two stories, Bronson Howard’s play The Henrietta and the novel The New Henrietta by Victor Mapes and Winchell Smith, which was meant to be an adaption of Howard’s play.
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  • D.W. Griffith – Way Down East (1920)

    1911-1920D.W. GriffithDramaSilentUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Way Down East (1920) is a silent film directed by D. W. Griffith and starring Lillian Gish. It is one of four film adaptations of the melodramatic 19th century play Way Down East by Lottie Blair Parker. There were two earlier silent versions, and one sound version in 1935, starring Henry Fonda.
    Griffith’s version is particularly remembered for its exciting climax in which Lillian Gish’s character is rescued from doom on an icy river. Some sources, quoting newspaper ads of the time, say a sequence was filmed in an early color process, possibly Technicolor or Prizmacolor.
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