Danish Silent Film
Scott Lord
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22 Nov 08:57
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Danish Silent Film: The Golden Clown (Kloven, A.W. Sandberg 1...
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17 Nov 02:26
Scott Lord Mystery: Suspense, Mary Sinclair in The Purloined Letter
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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17 Nov 02:21
This is Professor Allison, who studied at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Please consider taking his online course on the history of Boston at canvas.net.
silent film scott lord silent film
History of Boston free online
silent film scott lord silent film
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17 Nov 02:21
Scott Lord Silent Film: A Fool There Was (Powell, 1915)
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17 Nov 02:21
Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Torrent (Monta Bell, 1926)
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17 Nov 02:21
Scott Lord Film: Becky Sharp (Rouben Mamoulian, 1935)
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17 Nov 02:21
Scott Lord Mystery: Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes in Dressed to Kill...
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17 Nov 02:21
Ellery Queen and the Murder Ring (Hogan, 1941)
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17 Nov 02:21
Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes in Woman in Green ...
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17 Nov 02:20
Scott Lord Mystery: Suspense, Mary Sinclair in The Purloined Letter
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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17 Nov 02:19
Scott Lord Mystery: Suspense, Mary Sinclair in The Purloined Letter
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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17 Nov 02:19
Scott Lord Mystery: Suspense, Mary Sinclair in The Purloined Letter
by Scott Lord Mystery Films, Serials, Trailers
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17 Nov 02:19
Scott Lord Mystery: Suspense, Mary Sinclair in The Purloined Letter
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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17 Nov 02:18
Scott Lord Silent Film: Douglas Fairbanks in Flirting with Fate (Christy...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Robert M. Baker coscripted the 1916 film "Flirting with Fate" (five reels)with director Christy Cabanne for the Fine Arts Film Company. The periodical Motography during 1916 may have found an early, if not extreme, example of the character centered narrative. "It is all Douglas Fairbanks, but when one considers that he's an actor possessing so much color and dash it is readily understandable that this is nothing against "Flirting with Fate", far from that; it is something in its favor." The periodical The Moving Picture World during 1916 noted,"Superior in many respects to any vehicle Fairbanks has had, 'Flirting with Fate' introduces a comical element of fear which would have enabled the story to stand on its own merits in open competition, whether interpreted by Mr. Fairbanks or not....This greater story breadth is of high value in sustaining interest."
Actress Dorothy Haydel appears with Douglas Fairbanks in the film. Silent Film Douglas Fairbanks
Actress Dorothy Haydel appears with Douglas Fairbanks in the film. Silent Film Douglas Fairbanks
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17 Nov 02:18
Rudolph Valentino Silent Film Lobby Cards
Mary Pickford Silent Film Lobby Cards
Douglas Fairbanks Silent Film Lobby Cards
D.W. Griffith Silent Film Lobby Cards
Lon Chaney Silent Film Lobby Cards
Benjamin Christensen and Danish Silent Film silent film silent Film Lobby Cards Silent Film Lobby Cards
Lost Films, Found Magazines: The Lobby Cards of Lost SIlent Films
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Words and images that tell us what the film was about. Lost Films and Found Magazines
The article on Dartmouth professor Mark Williams was relevant, pertinent and succinct enought to require giving the name of the reporter, Kathy McCormack rather than just mentioning the Associated Press. Not being involved in film preservation itself but devoted to he study of the Photoplay, I have for years been gleaning through extratextural discourse, that which is not part of the codex of the film, to find what might have been contained in film that, for whatever reason, are now lost. When the article on lobby cards went to print, I had already had a blog entry with reproductions of lobby cards belonging to films mostly that were not lost, and being in public domain, were available through copies on my webpages, each copy of an existing film having an appended encouragement for the reader/viewer to become a film detective and find material concerning lost films-Lost Films, Found Magazines. In regard to the movie theater having similar exingencies as a museum, the lobby cards were displayed on easels and meant to be viewed by standing directly in front of them at a short distance, there being an audience reception to extratextural discourse, just as there is a "viewing" of paintings that has been changing during this century. A librarian paraphrsed by McCormack has posted that the purpose of the lobby cards were publicity and exploitation, the theater owner being an "exhibitor", but that, being aimed at the spectator, they disclosed the movie's plot, the technology soon improving to where the mood and atmosphere of the film could be surmised from the photographic images. The librarian quoted by McCormack claims that in additon to data regarding the film-and titles were often changed during production to differ from an earlier advertised title- lobby cards could often include a line of dialouge, if only one precious line of dialouge that would be a key to an entire lost film- lobby cards that were not "title cards" have been referred as "scene cards", Dartmouth College in fact had a collection of television commercials it had lent the Moving Image Rearch Center while McCormack was writing her article. The Moving Image Research Center houses material on Lois Weber and Alice-Guy Blanche. Mark Williams is presently part of he Media Ecology Project at Dartmouth College, which is digitalizing thousands of lobby cards to assist Film Preservation. Keep in mind that there have been a small number of rediscovered films, once presumed to be lost, one example being my writing on the John Barrymore version of Sherlock Holmes, which needed to be updated after the film had been found.Rudolph Valentino Silent Film Lobby Cards
Mary Pickford Silent Film Lobby Cards
Douglas Fairbanks Silent Film Lobby Cards
D.W. Griffith Silent Film Lobby Cards
Lon Chaney Silent Film Lobby Cards
Benjamin Christensen and Danish Silent Film silent film silent Film Lobby Cards Silent Film Lobby Cards
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17 Nov 02:18
Silent Film Movie Museum Reel Two Silent Film
Silent Film Movie Museum Reel Three Silent Film Movie Museum Reel Four
Paul Killiam opens his series on "the first quarter century of the movies" with the cinema of attractions and a brief section of "newsreel footage" of Fifth Avenue in New York City. It is mostly a compilation reel from the "Killiam Collection", perhaps selected or presented seemingly at random. The film abruptly cuts to a one reel example of the cinema of narrative integration from D.W. Griffith at Biograph.
Killiam televised silent films from the library of the Museum of Modern Art with his narration to suit then modern audiences while hosting The Paul Killiam Show, among the films featured having been "A Daughter of the Wilderness" (Edison Company, 1913) starring actresses Mary Fuller and Elsie MacLeod. The "Movie Museum" series aired in 1954.
Lost Silent Film
Scott Lord Silent Film: Movie Museum Reel One (Kiliam, Everson, Knight)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Silent Film Movie Museum Reel Two Silent Film
Silent Film Movie Museum Reel Three Silent Film Movie Museum Reel Four
Paul Killiam opens his series on "the first quarter century of the movies" with the cinema of attractions and a brief section of "newsreel footage" of Fifth Avenue in New York City. It is mostly a compilation reel from the "Killiam Collection", perhaps selected or presented seemingly at random. The film abruptly cuts to a one reel example of the cinema of narrative integration from D.W. Griffith at Biograph.
Killiam televised silent films from the library of the Museum of Modern Art with his narration to suit then modern audiences while hosting The Paul Killiam Show, among the films featured having been "A Daughter of the Wilderness" (Edison Company, 1913) starring actresses Mary Fuller and Elsie MacLeod. The "Movie Museum" series aired in 1954.
Lost Silent Film
Silent Film
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17 Nov 02:18
Scott Lord Silent Film: Movie Museum, Reel Two (Killiam, Everson, Knight)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Swedish Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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