The Haunted House
Silent FIlm Movie POsters
Scott Lord
Shared posts
21 Oct 03:04
Silent Film Movie Posters: Comedy
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
21 Oct 02:11
Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: December 2020
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
21 Oct 02:10
Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: 2021
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
21 Oct 02:10
Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: April 2020
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
21 Oct 02:10
Scott Lord Silent Film: Harold Lloyd in Haunted Spooks (Hal Roach, 1920)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
21 Oct 02:09
The Black Widow
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
21 Oct 02:07
Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Greta Garbo in Flesh and the Devil
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
08 Aug 03:53
Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: April 2019
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
08 Aug 03:34
Actress Linda Ardvison, writing in the periodcial Film Fun during 1916, includes the "now historic" film "The Advntures of Dollie" (one reel) directed by D.W Griffith for the Biograph Film Company in 1908. Arvidson wrote under the name Mrs. D.W. Griffith. In one installment she reminisces about travelling to film exterior scenes, claiming they hadn't automobiles yet and visited locations by train or by boat. In a later installment she dicusses her salary for the film, "How much money I made! Twenty eight dollars in two weeks, enough for a whole spring outfit." What is more enjoyable is the autobiography of Mrs. D.W. Griffith, When Movies Were Young, published in 1925. Much of the material from the Film Fun periodical is repeated, worded similarly, as she gives an account of D.W. Griffith the actor being offered a provisional chance to direct his first film, "The Adventures of Dollie", given that he could return to acting if necessary. Mrs. D.W. Griffith exlains Griffith having been accepted as a director for Biograph, "For one year now, those movies so covered with slime and so degraded would have to come first to come first in his thoughts and affections....agonizing days when he would have given his life to be able to chuck the job." She includes not only the studio on East Fourteenth Street but the theaters on Third and Ninth Avenues as places into which one would not be seen going.
Author Roger Manvell, in his sixty page introduction to the anthology "Experiment in the Film" credits "The Adventures of Dollie" as the first film in which D.W. Griffith had used the flashback.
Peter Cowie, in his volume Eighty Years of Cinema, notes that it was in 1908, in the film "For Love of Gold", that D.W. Griffith had first used the close up shot in film.
Silent Film D.W. Griffith D. W. Griffith
Scott Lord Silent Film: Linda Arvidson in The Adventures of Dollie (D.W....
scottlordpoet shared this story from Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film. |
Actress Linda Ardvison, writing in the periodcial Film Fun during 1916, includes the "now historic" film "The Advntures of Dollie" (one reel) directed by D.W Griffith for the Biograph Film Company in 1908. Arvidson wrote under the name Mrs. D.W. Griffith. In one installment she reminisces about travelling to film exterior scenes, claiming they hadn't automobiles yet and visited locations by train or by boat. In a later installment she dicusses her salary for the film, "How much money I made! Twenty eight dollars in two weeks, enough for a whole spring outfit." What is more enjoyable is the autobiography of Mrs. D.W. Griffith, When Movies Were Young, published in 1925. Much of the material from the Film Fun periodical is repeated, worded similarly, as she gives an account of D.W. Griffith the actor being offered a provisional chance to direct his first film, "The Adventures of Dollie", given that he could return to acting if necessary. Mrs. D.W. Griffith exlains Griffith having been accepted as a director for Biograph, "For one year now, those movies so covered with slime and so degraded would have to come first to come first in his thoughts and affections....agonizing days when he would have given his life to be able to chuck the job." She includes not only the studio on East Fourteenth Street but the theaters on Third and Ninth Avenues as places into which one would not be seen going.
Author Roger Manvell, in his sixty page introduction to the anthology "Experiment in the Film" credits "The Adventures of Dollie" as the first film in which D.W. Griffith had used the flashback.
Peter Cowie, in his volume Eighty Years of Cinema, notes that it was in 1908, in the film "For Love of Gold", that D.W. Griffith had first used the close up shot in film.
Silent Film D.W. Griffith D. W. Griffith
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and one other like this
08 Aug 03:22
Scott Lord Silent Film: Yesterday and Today Newsreel (1929)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
08 Aug 03:22
In the autobiographical reminiscences William N. Selig printed in Photoplay Magazine during 1920, Selig, perhaps almost graciously, credits Edison with the "first single reel picture containing a story in continuity", although he adds that "The Great Train Robbery" was only 800 feet and that he was soon on Edison's coattails with films of his own of length equal to it. Interestingly, Selig recounts in the article director Frank Boggs as "the real pioneer in photographic reproduction", his during 1908 releasing a one reel film every week; Selig claims Boggs was assasinated on the Selig Studios during 1912. Vladimir Petric in A Visual/Analytical History of Silent Film (1895-1930), Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, notes Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" as a "primitive use of parralel editing to dramatize the narrative". Not only is this in sharp contrast to the earlier cinema of attractions that relegated storytelling to the act of display, but the film is significant as the first film made in the Western genre. It is uncanny that the closing shot, as a subjective shot, is an attraction, something static and something dispalyed, urging the spectatator to draw and shoot back. Patric Vonderau and Vinzenz Hedigar have written, "The visuality of the display, however, is still indispensible to its effect."- albeit their recent volume, Films That Work, is primarily concerned with international industrial films.
Author Nicholas A. Vardac opines that it was the films of Edwin S. Porter that D.W. Griffith aquired the technique of viewing the shot within its context as a "syntax for the melodrama". Whether crosscutting began with Edwin S. Porter and "The Great Train Robbery", a film which is attributed as having used croscutting in the volume The Film Idea, written by Stanley J. Solomon, or whether it was more properly developed by D.W. Griffith around 1908, as with the parallel editing in the 1907 films "The Greaser's Gauntlet" and "The Fatal Hour" (Phillipe Gauthier, Harvard University), author Stanley Solomon points out that crosscutting was intrinsiclly cinematic, rather than dramaturgical or theatrical by describing it as "a technique suitable to the form of cinema but unnatural to the form of nineteenth century stage drama, which was at that time a significant influence on the new media." A recent online film class on how to "read" a film from described the film as being comprised of "seperate shots of non-continuous, non-overlapping action" while being careful to designate the film as an early example of crosscutting. Of "The Great Train Robbery", author Peter Cowie, in his volume Eighty Years of Cinema, writes, "The movement, as well as the narrative, was carried over from one scene to another." Cowie mentions the film "Runaway Match", directed in 1903 by Alf Collins as being an early narrative silent in which "camera movements and positions are exploited to advantage". The film is fast paced, depicting a couple hurriedly en route to their betrothal, but includes a close up insert shot of their wedding rings.
Film historian Charles Mussur, in Before the Nickelodeon :Edwin S. Porter, writes, "Porter's film meticulously documents a process...The film's narrative structure, as Gaudreault notes, utilizes temporal repetition with an overall narrative progression." As narrative it was essentially a reenactment film. He adds that "Porter exploited procedures that heighten the realism and believabilty of the image" (David Levy).
It is apparent that "The Great Train Robbery" was filmed not only in the studio, but on actual locations, including in fact a train Porter had borrowed in New Jersey; it also apparent that "The Great Train Robbery" released during 1904 by Sigmund Lubin also combined scenes filmed both outdoors and inside the studio, the film also concluding with a close up of an outlaw. Catalougues "free upon request" featuring "Lubin's Latest Hits" list Lubin's "The Great Train Robbery" as running 600 ft, there being sixteen seperate scenes to the film. The 1903 Edison Manufacturing Company catalougue lists the running legnth of Edison's "The Great Train Robbery", a "sensational and highly tragic subject", as 740 ft, the film divided into fourteen scenes.
The sequel to "The Great Train Robbery", titled "The Little Train Robbery" (1905) although directed by Edwin S. Porter for the Edison Company, is a parody, and features an all child actor cast.
Silent Film Silent Film D. W. Griffith
Scott Lord Silent Film: The Great Train Robbery (Porter,1903)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
In the autobiographical reminiscences William N. Selig printed in Photoplay Magazine during 1920, Selig, perhaps almost graciously, credits Edison with the "first single reel picture containing a story in continuity", although he adds that "The Great Train Robbery" was only 800 feet and that he was soon on Edison's coattails with films of his own of length equal to it. Interestingly, Selig recounts in the article director Frank Boggs as "the real pioneer in photographic reproduction", his during 1908 releasing a one reel film every week; Selig claims Boggs was assasinated on the Selig Studios during 1912. Vladimir Petric in A Visual/Analytical History of Silent Film (1895-1930), Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, notes Porter's "The Great Train Robbery" as a "primitive use of parralel editing to dramatize the narrative". Not only is this in sharp contrast to the earlier cinema of attractions that relegated storytelling to the act of display, but the film is significant as the first film made in the Western genre. It is uncanny that the closing shot, as a subjective shot, is an attraction, something static and something dispalyed, urging the spectatator to draw and shoot back. Patric Vonderau and Vinzenz Hedigar have written, "The visuality of the display, however, is still indispensible to its effect."- albeit their recent volume, Films That Work, is primarily concerned with international industrial films.
Author Nicholas A. Vardac opines that it was the films of Edwin S. Porter that D.W. Griffith aquired the technique of viewing the shot within its context as a "syntax for the melodrama". Whether crosscutting began with Edwin S. Porter and "The Great Train Robbery", a film which is attributed as having used croscutting in the volume The Film Idea, written by Stanley J. Solomon, or whether it was more properly developed by D.W. Griffith around 1908, as with the parallel editing in the 1907 films "The Greaser's Gauntlet" and "The Fatal Hour" (Phillipe Gauthier, Harvard University), author Stanley Solomon points out that crosscutting was intrinsiclly cinematic, rather than dramaturgical or theatrical by describing it as "a technique suitable to the form of cinema but unnatural to the form of nineteenth century stage drama, which was at that time a significant influence on the new media." A recent online film class on how to "read" a film from described the film as being comprised of "seperate shots of non-continuous, non-overlapping action" while being careful to designate the film as an early example of crosscutting. Of "The Great Train Robbery", author Peter Cowie, in his volume Eighty Years of Cinema, writes, "The movement, as well as the narrative, was carried over from one scene to another." Cowie mentions the film "Runaway Match", directed in 1903 by Alf Collins as being an early narrative silent in which "camera movements and positions are exploited to advantage". The film is fast paced, depicting a couple hurriedly en route to their betrothal, but includes a close up insert shot of their wedding rings.
Film historian Charles Mussur, in Before the Nickelodeon :Edwin S. Porter, writes, "Porter's film meticulously documents a process...The film's narrative structure, as Gaudreault notes, utilizes temporal repetition with an overall narrative progression." As narrative it was essentially a reenactment film. He adds that "Porter exploited procedures that heighten the realism and believabilty of the image" (David Levy).
It is apparent that "The Great Train Robbery" was filmed not only in the studio, but on actual locations, including in fact a train Porter had borrowed in New Jersey; it also apparent that "The Great Train Robbery" released during 1904 by Sigmund Lubin also combined scenes filmed both outdoors and inside the studio, the film also concluding with a close up of an outlaw. Catalougues "free upon request" featuring "Lubin's Latest Hits" list Lubin's "The Great Train Robbery" as running 600 ft, there being sixteen seperate scenes to the film. The 1903 Edison Manufacturing Company catalougue lists the running legnth of Edison's "The Great Train Robbery", a "sensational and highly tragic subject", as 740 ft, the film divided into fourteen scenes.
The sequel to "The Great Train Robbery", titled "The Little Train Robbery" (1905) although directed by Edwin S. Porter for the Edison Company, is a parody, and features an all child actor cast.
Silent Film Silent Film D. W. Griffith
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
08 Aug 03:22
Scott Lord Mystery: Mercury Theater: Orson Welles as The Immortal Sherlo...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
08 Aug 03:22
Scott Lord Mystery: E.G. Marshall in C.B.S Radio Mystery Theater: The Sp...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and one other like this
08 Aug 03:17
Enemy Agents Meet Ellery Queen (Hogan, 1942)
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and one other like this
08 Aug 03:16
Scott Lord Mystery: It Came from Outer Space theatrical trailer (Jack Ar...
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
08 Aug 03:16
Mystery: Mystery Liner (Nigh, 1934)
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
08 Aug 03:15
magazine art
by noreply@blogger.com (Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film)
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
28 Jul 03:45
Scott Lord Silent Film: Yesterday and Today Newsreel (1929)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
28 Jul 03:45
Scott Lord Silent Film: Castle Films Yesteryear Lives Again
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
28 Jul 03:44
Scott Lord Horror Comedy: Scared Stiff (McDonald, 1945)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film,
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
28 Jul 03:44
Scott Lord Horror Comedy: One Frightened Night (Christy Cabanne, 1935)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film,
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
28 Jul 03:44
Scott Lord Mystery: E.G. Marshall in CBS Radio Mystery Theater The Adven...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
28 Jul 03:44
Scott Lord Mystery: E.G. Marshall in C.B.S Radio Mystery Theater: The Sp...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and one other like this
28 Jul 03:44
Scott Lord Mystery: E.G. Marshall in C.B.S. Radio Mystery Theater The Si...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and one other like this
28 Jul 03:43
Sherlock Holmes: Silent Film
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and -1 others like this
28 Jul 03:42
Scott Lord Mystery: The Phantom Creeps with Bela Lugosi
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and one other like this
28 Jul 03:42
The Speckled Band
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and one other like this