Scott Lord Mystery Film
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13 May 08:35
Scott Lord Silent Film: Gustaf Wasa (Brunius, 1928)
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
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13 May 08:35
Scott Lord Swedish Silent Film: Gyurkoricsarna (John Brunius, 1920)
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13 May 08:35
Scott Lord Silent Film: (Hårda viljor (Brunius, 1923)
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13 May 08:33
Mystery- Phantom Fiend (Maurice Elvey,Paul Rotha)
by Scott Lord
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13 May 08:33
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Silent Horror Film
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13 May 08:33
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)
Greta Garbo
Tags: greta garbo
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13 May 08:33
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)
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13 May 08:33
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Silent Garbo
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13 May 08:33
Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film
Silent Film Greta Garbo
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13 May 08:33
Scott Lord Silent Film: Biblical Drama, Sign of the Cross (Frederick A Thomson, 1914)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film
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13 May 08:32
Victor Seastrom - YouTube
Victor Sjostrom
Tags: 'Victor Sjostrom'
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13 May 08:32
Swedish Silent Film - YouTube
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13 May 08:32
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Swedish Silent Film
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13 May 08:32
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scandinavian Film
Scandinavian Silent Film
Tags: Scandinavian
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Swedish Silent Film
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Silent Horror Film
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo, 1926)
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
The periodical Motion Picture News during 1926 the filming of "Temptress" with a review entitled "Greta Garbo in the Title Role of 'The Temptress'. It read,"Greta Garbo, Swedish actress, will have the title role in Cosmopolitan's production of 'The Temptress, which will be a Metro Goldwyn Mayer release directed by Mauritz Stiller. She is now working in 'Ibanez' The Torrent'." Greta Garbo had in fact signed to do the film on the condition that Stiller was to direct.
The periodical Motion Picture News during 1925 announced that Mauritz Stiller had been slated to direct "The Temptress" by imparting that he had been brought to the United States by Louis B. Mayer. "Stiller won wide reputation in Europe for his productions." Exhibitors Herald listed the filming of "The Torrent" as being in progress with Monta Bell directing Greta Garbo, Mauritz Stiller "to direct the Temptress".
Biographer Norman J. Zeirold, in his volume Garbo, describes Mauritz Stiller's idea behind filming Greta Garbo, "Only swift disaster lay shead. Stiller wanted to turn the standard story of a make-enslaving vamp into a richly embroidered spectacle. And he wanted to film it in his own manner. He ordered MGM's vast eschelons of production assistants off the film. He began shooting, not in sequence, but as the spirit moved him as he had done in Europe. Thalberg looked at the rushes and could make no sense of the jumbled images."
Author Forsyth Hardy, in his volume Scandinavian Film, curtly, only briefly mentions that Mauritz Stiller was removed as director of the film after a disagreement with Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Biographer William Stewart, in The True Life Story of Greta Garbo gives an account purporting that Mauritz Stiller "had not yet mastered the American method of making pictures. Handling crowds gave him trouble and his lack of English made every move difficult." Hollywood writer Bosley Crowther, in his biography of Louis B. Mayer entitled The Hollywood Rajah writes that Mauritz Stiller "proved to be too finicky and slow" and "difficult", a type of director that "were now being got out of the studio", but adds that before the filming of "The Temptress" was completed, Greta Garbo had met and fallen in love with Jack Gilbert. Although Garbo and Gilbert met during 1926, it seems that Crowther is approximating and according to Clarence Brown, her director, Garbo and Gilbert met on the set of the third film Greta Garbo had made in the United States.
Ruth Biery, who writes "I have seldom met anyone more timid than Garbo' became known to readers of fan magazines as the first biographer to introduce Greta Garbo with an interview from New Year's Eve 1927 that resulted in her appearing in three issues during 1928, Garbo the May Photoplay cover. Ruth Biery returned to the subject of Garbo and Stillerfour years later. "They cast her in 'The Temptress' because Mauritz Stiller insisted upon it. He was to direct it. He directed the production in a way that would work to the advantage of his protoge. Garbo was tall. Antonio Moreno, the actor, was not so tall. The directed insisted that he wear his hair pompador fashion to make him look taller. He put him into boots- undoubtedly to make Garbo's feet look smaller. Moreno resented his favoritism. There was a battle and Stiller lost. He was removed from the picture. This was Garbo' first experience with studio politics. Because of her, Stiller lost his job. Yet it was her friend Stiller who insisted on her being in the picture. She was bewildered, crushed." Biery continued, "She may have loved Stiller. I do not know. I do know she enshrined him. When she talked to me of Stiller her eyes filled with tears, her entire body trembled with emotion."
The first instance of Greta Garbo granting an interview to journalist Rilla Page Palmborg, author of The Private Life of Greta Garbo, was on the set of "The Temptress". " 'I was frantic when Mr. Stiller was taken from the picture,' she said. 'It is difficult for me to understand direction through an interpreter. Everything over here is strange and different. And this studio is so large it confuses me.' "
The True Life Story of Greta Garbo by William Stewart continues, "The second disaster to occur during the filming of 'The Temptress' was the death of Greta's sister."
In The Private Life of Greta Garbo, journalist Rilla Page Palmborg wrote, "Garbo made even a greater sensation in The Temptress than in The Torrent....But Greta declared she knew nothing of the technique of acting. That for the time being she 'was' the person in the picture. She did not know how she got certain effects. She did not know why she did things the way she did them."
Silent Film
Greta Garbo Victor Seastrom
The periodical Motion Picture News during 1925 announced that Mauritz Stiller had been slated to direct "The Temptress" by imparting that he had been brought to the United States by Louis B. Mayer. "Stiller won wide reputation in Europe for his productions." Exhibitors Herald listed the filming of "The Torrent" as being in progress with Monta Bell directing Greta Garbo, Mauritz Stiller "to direct the Temptress".
Biographer Norman J. Zeirold, in his volume Garbo, describes Mauritz Stiller's idea behind filming Greta Garbo, "Only swift disaster lay shead. Stiller wanted to turn the standard story of a make-enslaving vamp into a richly embroidered spectacle. And he wanted to film it in his own manner. He ordered MGM's vast eschelons of production assistants off the film. He began shooting, not in sequence, but as the spirit moved him as he had done in Europe. Thalberg looked at the rushes and could make no sense of the jumbled images."
Author Forsyth Hardy, in his volume Scandinavian Film, curtly, only briefly mentions that Mauritz Stiller was removed as director of the film after a disagreement with Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Biographer William Stewart, in The True Life Story of Greta Garbo gives an account purporting that Mauritz Stiller "had not yet mastered the American method of making pictures. Handling crowds gave him trouble and his lack of English made every move difficult." Hollywood writer Bosley Crowther, in his biography of Louis B. Mayer entitled The Hollywood Rajah writes that Mauritz Stiller "proved to be too finicky and slow" and "difficult", a type of director that "were now being got out of the studio", but adds that before the filming of "The Temptress" was completed, Greta Garbo had met and fallen in love with Jack Gilbert. Although Garbo and Gilbert met during 1926, it seems that Crowther is approximating and according to Clarence Brown, her director, Garbo and Gilbert met on the set of the third film Greta Garbo had made in the United States.
Ruth Biery, who writes "I have seldom met anyone more timid than Garbo' became known to readers of fan magazines as the first biographer to introduce Greta Garbo with an interview from New Year's Eve 1927 that resulted in her appearing in three issues during 1928, Garbo the May Photoplay cover. Ruth Biery returned to the subject of Garbo and Stillerfour years later. "They cast her in 'The Temptress' because Mauritz Stiller insisted upon it. He was to direct it. He directed the production in a way that would work to the advantage of his protoge. Garbo was tall. Antonio Moreno, the actor, was not so tall. The directed insisted that he wear his hair pompador fashion to make him look taller. He put him into boots- undoubtedly to make Garbo's feet look smaller. Moreno resented his favoritism. There was a battle and Stiller lost. He was removed from the picture. This was Garbo' first experience with studio politics. Because of her, Stiller lost his job. Yet it was her friend Stiller who insisted on her being in the picture. She was bewildered, crushed." Biery continued, "She may have loved Stiller. I do not know. I do know she enshrined him. When she talked to me of Stiller her eyes filled with tears, her entire body trembled with emotion."
The first instance of Greta Garbo granting an interview to journalist Rilla Page Palmborg, author of The Private Life of Greta Garbo, was on the set of "The Temptress". " 'I was frantic when Mr. Stiller was taken from the picture,' she said. 'It is difficult for me to understand direction through an interpreter. Everything over here is strange and different. And this studio is so large it confuses me.' "
The True Life Story of Greta Garbo by William Stewart continues, "The second disaster to occur during the filming of 'The Temptress' was the death of Greta's sister."
In The Private Life of Greta Garbo, journalist Rilla Page Palmborg wrote, "Garbo made even a greater sensation in The Temptress than in The Torrent....But Greta declared she knew nothing of the technique of acting. That for the time being she 'was' the person in the picture. She did not know how she got certain effects. She did not know why she did things the way she did them."
Silent Film
Greta Garbo Victor Seastrom
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord Silent Film: Biblical Drama, Sign of the Cross (Frederick A T...
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord Swedish Silent Film: The Phantom Carriage (Korkarlen,Victor S...
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
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13 May 08:30
: Vampyr (Carl Th. Dreyer, 1932)
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord Silent Film: Lon Chaney in He Who Gets Slapped (Victor Seastr...
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord Swedish Silent Film: Synd (Gustaf Molander, 1928)
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13 May 08:30
Scott Lord Silent Film: Gustaf Wasa (Brunius, 1928)
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13 May 08:29
Scott Lord Swedish Silent Film: Gyurkoricsarna (John Brunius, 1920)
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13 May 08:29
Scott Lord Silent Film: (Hårda viljor (Brunius, 1923)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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13 May 08:29
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)
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13 May 08:29
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Swedish Silent Film
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13 May 08:29
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Silent Horror Film
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