Scott Lord
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Scott Lord Mystery: Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1913
Scott Lord: Danish Silent Film Christensen 1926
Scott Lord Silent Film: When Knighthood Was In Flo...
Scott Lord Mystery: Evelyn Ankers in The Villier’s Diamond (Mainwaring, ...
The Primitive Lover (Sidney Franklin, 1922)
Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Beauty’s Worth (Robert Vignola, 1922)
Scott Lord Silent Film: Clara Kimball Young in The Worldly Madonna (Harry, Garson,1922)
Scott Lord on Silent Film - YouTube
Scott Lord Silent Film: A Trip to Mars (Edison, 1910)
Silent Film
Tags: silent film
Sherlock Holmes: Silent Film
Scott Lord Silent Film: Clara Kimball Young in The Wordly Madonna (1922)
The films of Clara Kimball Young were a springboard for the scriptwriter Lenore Coffee, whose first films as a screenwriter "The Better Wife" (William Earle, 1919, five reels) and "The Forbidden Woman" (1920) had starred the actress.
Silent Film Silent Film
Scott Lord Silent Film: A Trip to Mars (Edison, 1910)
Scott Lord Silent Film: The Eclipse (Georges Melies, 1907)
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...
Swedish Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom, Victor Seastrom, Greta Garbo, Mauritz Stiller, Lon Chaney: Scott Lord Silent Film: Asta Nielsen as Hamlet (Sven Gade, 1920)
Scott Lord Mystery: The Black Widow (1947) Chapter Two The Stolen Formula
Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Mysterious Lady (Fred Niblo, 1928)
Scott Lord Silent Film: Asta Nielsen as Hamlet (Sven Gade, 1920)
Lilly Jacobsson played Ophelia opposite Asta Nielsen's titular Hamlet. The film was photographed by Curt Courant and Danish Silent Film cinematographer Axel Graatkjaer, who had photographed the 1911 Danish film version of Hamlet directed by August Blom.
"Hamlet" filmed by Georges Melies as "Hamlet and the Jester's Skull" in 1907 is a lost film with no surviving copies. The first screen version of "Hamlet" appears to have been directed by Will Barker in 1904, which inspired a French version in 1909 directed by George Bourgeois.
It is inevitable that if we ask about audience reception, the individual spectator inevitably experiences and internalizes Hamlet's soliloquy from Act III directed and performed by Laurence Olivier subjectively, but just as inevitably might be drawn to the character by the graveyard scene and Yorik from Act V when directed by Tony Richardson and performed by Nicol Williamson, "the audience as a postulated construct" simultaneously a subjective viewer; and yet the conflict between characters that might bring an immediate response is peripheral.
Sven Gade came to the United States to direct actress Jacqueline Logan during 1925 in the film "Peacock Feathers" before turning screenwriter.
Danish Silent Film
Asta Nielsen in The Abyss
Swedish Silent Film Blog Archive
The website garbo-seastrom.blogspot.com, titled "Swedish Silent Film," is a specialized historical and film-studies archive maintained by Scott Lord.
The site is a deep-dive resource focused on the "Golden Age" of Swedish silent cinema and its transition into the Hollywood studio system. It is particularly noted for its focus on the careers of Greta Garbo, Victor Sjöström (known in Hollywood as Victor Seastrom), and Mauritz Stiller.
Key Features and Content:
"Lost Films in Found Magazines": A recurring theme where the author uses vintage fan magazines (like Photoplay, Motion Picture, and Screenland), reviews, and advertisements from the 1920s to reconstruct or provide context for silent films that are now lost or physically deteriorated.
Archival Poetics: The blog uses an academic and theoretical lens to analyze early screen culture. It examines films like The Torrent (1926) and A Woman of Affairs (1929) not just as movies, but as collections of iconography and "modernity."
Biographical Research: It provides extensive coverage of the Swedish origins of major stars and directors, tracking their move from Stockholm to America. It includes rare photos, fashion sketches (such as "What the Garbo Girl should Wear"), and contemporary accounts of their private lives.
Visual Documentation: The site is heavily illustrated with high-quality scans of vintage film stills, portraits, and magazine clippings, making it a valuable visual archive.
Scope: While the primary focus is Swedish talent, it also covers related figures of the era like Lon Chaney, John Gilbert, Lillian Gish, and Lars Hanson.
The blog is highly regarded by film historians and fans of classic cinema for its ability to connect early 20th-century literature, fashion, and social phenomena to the evolution of the motion picture.
Gustaf Molander
During 1927 Gustaf Molander directed the film "Sealed Lips" ("Forseglade lappar") with Wanda Rothgardt, Mona Martensen, Stina Berg and Karin Swanstrom. It was the first film to be photographed by Ake Dalquist. Film Daily in the United States reviewed the film during 1928, writing, "Mona Martenson looks as if she will be heard from after developing more screen experience....Others, evidently Swedish players also all competent for their roles...Some of the technique employed is stilted, but fine directorial touches and an interesting story quite capably acted makes it a novel diversion. Fair program if cut and retitled."
During 1927 Gustaf Molander also directed the film "Discord/His English Wife" ("Hans engleska fur") with Margit Manstad, Wanda Rothdardt, Lil Dagover and Margit Rosengren in what would be her first appearance on screen. In the United States Motion Picture News Booking Guide reviewed the film "His English Wife/Discord" as a "Society Drama" relating its theme as "Avaricious relations force girl to marry wealthy farmer. Used to city life she soon tires of his home and returns to city. They come to an understanding only after the wife finds her gaiety false and her love for her husband the main thing." Film Daily in the United States, where Pathe had acquired the film for distribution and advertised it as though it were their production, opined that the film was a "Society drama with European background and treatment that is effective in many instances. No very familiar names but several worthy performances." Among those performances the magazines deemed worthy of reviewing were "Gosta Ekman, the handsome blond man about town, Uhro Somersalmi good at times but occasionally given to to overdone guestures. Stina Berg very comfortable and likable housekeeper." The magazine looked favorably at Molander's direction.
Peter Cowie, in his volume Scandinavian Cinema, evaluates Molander's direction of the film with, "Molander's direction fails to bring the London sequences alive, but once on home territory his flair for outdoor filming enhances the mood." Cowie summarizes the unfolding of the narrative with "The film degenerates into a drawing room drama." Forsyth Hardy sees the films as comedies that unduly come under the heavy influence of Paul Merzback of Svensk Filmindustri, who was looking for a more international audience, and who would bring a frivolity to early sound films made in Sweden that now would seem far too typical. When reviewed in the United States, it was written that "His English Wife" was a film in which "the acting is of the school that believes in tapping fingers and clenched hands" and when "Sealed Lips" was reviewed it was written that "the direction goes back to the stand-gaze-and-hark acting of the old days." Hardy reverses his sentiment on Molander by later writing, " His 'Malapiratrer' (1923) adapted from a comedy from Sigfried Sibertz, was a fresh and spontaneous piece of work with some pleasant acting by Einar Hanson and Inga Tibland." Actress Stina Berg had appeared in "Constable Paulis Easter Bomb/The Smugglers" (Polis Paulus skasmall, 1925), directed by Gustaf Molander and also starring Guken Cederberg and Lilli Lanni.
Author Forsyth Hardy includes "Triumph of the Heart" (Hjartes Triumf, 1929) among those films made under the influence of Paul Merzbach which "made little impression on the film going world outside Sweden and they contributed nothing to the tradition built up during the Sjostrom-Stiller period." (Hardy)
Swedish Silent Film
Silent Film
Silent Film
Greta Garbo
Greta Garbo: Greta Garbo in The Mysterious Lady (Fred Niblo, 19...
Greta Garbo: Greta Garbo in (The Temptress, Fred Niblo, 1926)
Greta Garbo Biography Films Photos: Greta Garbo
Scott Lord
victor sjostrom
Scott Lord Mystery
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Date: Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 11:12 PM
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