Shared posts

15 Aug 03:40

Magazine Art

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:40

Silent Film art

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:40

Mystery Film: The Full Page Ad as Poster

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:40

Basil Rathbone

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

The Cat and the Canary (1927)

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

Jane Eyre (Monogram)

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

the beautiful Fay Wray in The Evil Mind

by noreply@blogger.com (Unknown)
15 Aug 03:39

Scott Lord Mystery: Sherlock Holmes The Case of Harry Crocker (1954)

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

Sherlock Holmes Trailers-Pearl of Death

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)


I happen to carry a Basil Rathbone Players Cigarette Card (1938) in my wallet.


Mystery scott lord
15 Aug 03:39

Mr Wong in Chinatown

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

The Cat and the Canary (1927)

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

The Cat and the Canary (1927)

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

Mystery: The Late Show, Sherlock Holmes The Speckled Band

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

Sherlock Holmes Fatal Hour

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)


































15 Aug 03:39

Mr Wong in Chinatown

by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
15 Aug 03:39

Scandinavian Film



Revising my webpages on Swedish Film: Please visit:

Scott Lord scott lord
15 Aug 03:38

FIVE ALL NIGHT-Truly Great Entertainment



When I had my Super Eight projector, the Universal films were split into two channels. The Basil Rathbone Nigel Bruce, Warner Oland and Peter Lorre detective films were on an independent channel and the Universal Horror films were on one of the three network stations.

This intro to the film I remember and would have always wanted to have my own slot. Please enjoy this splice (ie. clip) of"my first professor", whose residence for his artistry was as host of classic horror film on the "late night double feature picture show" in Boston.

Scott Lord silent film
01 Aug 04:00

The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes

01 Aug 04:00

Silent film newsreel

Silent film

Tags: silent film

01 Aug 04:00

Silent film art

01 Aug 04:00

Magazine Art

01 Aug 04:00

Silent Film art

01 Aug 04:00

Mystery Film: The Full Page Ad as Poster

01 Aug 04:00

Scott Lord Silent Film:The Death of Rudolph Valentino (Pathe Newsreel)

01 Aug 03:59

Silent film newsreel

Silent film

Tags: silent film

01 Aug 03:59

Scott Lord: Silent Sherlock Holmes

01 Aug 03:59

Scott Lord: Sherlock Holmes- The Woman In Green (Roy William Neal)

01 Aug 03:58

Scott Lord Silent Film: Nosferatu (F.W. Murnau, 1922)


The film adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's account of Dr.Jekyll and Mr. Hyde directed by F.W. Murnau during 1920 is presumed lost, with no known existing copies of the film. "The Head of Janus" (Der Janus Kopf, Love's Mockery) had starred Conrad Veidt amd Bela Lugosi and is credited with having been one of the first films to include the use of the moving-camera shot. F.W. Murnau made 21 feature films, 8 of which are presumed lost, with no surviving copies. Included among them is the 1920 horror film "The Hunchback and the Dancer" (Der Bucklige und die Tanzerin) photographed by Karl Freund.
Lotte H. Eisner, in his biography titled Murnau, looks at a scene change to the shooting script of "Nosferatu" written by Henrik Galeen made by the director, F.W. Murnau, but adds that few additons and revisions to the original script were made by Murnau. "Sometimes the film is different than the scenario though Murnau had not indicated any change in the script...But there is a suprising sequence in which nearly twelve pages (thirteen sequences) have been rewritten by Murnau."
Lotte H. Eisner analyzes the film "Nosferatu" in his companion volume to his biography of Murnau, The Haunted Screen. "Nature participates in the action. Sensitive editing makes the bounding waves foretell the approach of the vampire." Eisner later adds, "Murnau was one of the few German film-directors to have the innate love of the landscape more typical of the Swedes (Arthur von Gerlach, creator of Die Chronik von Grieshums, was another) and hes was always reluctant to resort to artifice." Murnau had visited Sweden where the cameras being used were made of metal rather than wood, which aquainted him with techniques that were in fact more modern. Author Lotte H Eisner, in his volume Murnau writes of F.W. Murnau viewing the films of Victor Sjostrom and Mauritz Stiller "when he made 'Nosferatu', the idea of using negative for the phantom forest came from Sjostrom's 'Phantom Carriage', which had been made in 1920. Above all, he had a love-hatred for Mauritz Stiller, whose 'Herre Arne's Treasure' he couldn't stop admiring."
Not only can we look at Murnau's film to compare and contrast its use of landscape and location to that of Swedish Silent Films, but the Wisconsin Film Society during 1960 pointed out that its narrative was situated in a different century. "Murnau probably felt that by transferring the action to the year 1838 he would have an atmosphere more condusive to the supernatural. Because of the distance in time, an audience is perhaps more willing to employ its 'suspension of disbelief'." The Film Society mentions F.W. Murnau having filmed the Vampire's carriage in fast-motion for effect, an effect which it felt had been lost on the audiences of 1960. It conceded that shooting on location brought the film "far from the studio atmosphere", but hesitated, "Although frequently careless in technical details (camerwork, exposure, lighting, composition, and actor direction) it had variety and pace."
Lotte H. Eisner, in her volume Murnau, writes, "As always, Murnau found visual means of suggesting unreality". Professor David Thorburn, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, expresses aprreciation and gratitude for the author's writings pointing out that "her arguments in The Haunted Screen are still widely accepted." In regard to the expression of unreality, David Thorburn sees Expressionism as having been typified by "distortion and surreal exaggation" as well as having been "interested in finding equivalents for he inner life, dramatizing not the external world, but the world within us." If not the first horror film, Thorburn delegates "Nosferatu" to being an "origin film" and as "the film in which we can see Murnau freeing the camera.....no one had ever used the camera outdoors more effectively up to this time than Murnau". Lotte H Eisner, in The Haunted Screen writes, "The landscape and views of the little town and the castle in Nosferatu were filmed on location...Murnau, however, making Nosferatu with a minimum of resourses saw all that nature had to offer in the way of fine images...Nature participates in the action."
Close-up magazine during 1929 reviewed the film, unaware that the Wisconsin Film Society would later favor the 1931 Tod Browning version, "The film opens with beautifully composed shots typical of Murnau (one spotlight on the hair, now turn the face slightly, and another spotlight)....It is unquestionably a faithful transcription of the book.
During 1926, when Murnau was readying to come to American, the periodical Moving Picture World interviewed his assistant, Hermann Bing, "Murnau's intention is to try to make pictures which will please the American theatre patrons- commercial successes because of their artistry....Murnau's object will be not to describe but to depict the relentless march of realities not for the objective, but from a subjective viewpoint." This almost seems like a nod to Carl Th. Dreyer's later film "Vampyr", other than that Dreyer's film had been made during the advent of sound film while Murnau was in America, shortly before Murnau's death. Fox Film publicity happenned to announce F.W. Murnau's coming to America by withholding the title of his debut American fim, giving the name of the dramatist that wrote its photoplay as Dr. Karl Mayer. "Theater Audiences Everywhere Are Waiting For This Creation".
Silent Film
In regard to the extratextual discourse of movie magazines of the time period, during 1929 the periodical Motion Picture News subtitled their review of "Nosferatu" with "Morbid and Depressing". It deemed Murnau's adaptation of the novel by Bram Stoker to be "a vague yarn hard to follow with several sequences that have a tremendous part to do with the plot introduced most haphazardly."
Silent Horror Film

Faust (F.W. Murnau, 1926)

Silent Film

Silent Film
01 Aug 03:58

Scott Lord: Sherlock Holmes- The Woman In Green (Roy William Neal)

01 Aug 03:58

point of view shots of Donna's desk at Church Library

The library, built in 1809, is beautiful.
These two botttom photographs in particular were taken from behnd Donna's desk from where she checks in books with a scanner and removes the checkout cards. I discussed theology with a new minister today explaining to him that he was the eighth minster I have had a rapport with and that my questions are more precise after a decade. There have been ten or eleven I have known since attending. Scott Lord