Scott Lord
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19 Oct 00:54
Scott Lord Mystery: The Great Alaskan Mystery, Chapter Six (Taylor, Collins, 1944)
by Scott Lord Mystery Film
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19 Oct 00:51
Scott Lord Mystery: The Phantom Creeps, Chapter Ten, Phantom Footprints
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
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19 Oct 00:50
Scott Lord Mystery: Ramsay Ames in The Black Widow: Chapter Eight, Fals...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
19 Oct 00:50
Scott Lord Mystery: Ramsay Ames in The Black Widow, Chapter Six, The Gla...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
19 Oct 00:50
Scott Lord Mystery: Ramsay Ames in The Black Widow, Chapter Five, The S...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
19 Oct 00:50
Scott Lord Mystery: Ramsey Ames in The Black Widow: Chapter Four, Peril ...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
19 Oct 00:50
Scott Lord Mystery: The Black Widow, Chapter Three, The Hidden Death
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
19 Oct 00:50
Scott Lord Mystery: Ramsey Ames in The Black Widow (1947) Chapter Two Th...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
19 Oct 00:49
Scott Lord Mystery: Ramsey Ames in The Black Widow (1947) Chapter One De...
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:58
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Gustaf Molander
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01 Oct 02:58
Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Greta Garbo before Hollywood- Einar Hanson
Scott Lord Mystery Film, Scott Lord and one other like this
01 Oct 02:58
The immanent departure of director F.W. Murnau for America had already been announced by the periodical Motion Picture News during late 1925 while Murnau was readying the film "Faust". It was to star Gosta Ekman, "a young Swedish actor who has the title role. He has been a star on the legitimate stage and is now making his first appearance in pictures." Scholar Janet Bergstrom, University of California notes that F.W Murnau had recieced a letter from William Fox during 1925 prompted by the success of "The Last Laugh" (Der Letze Mann) and had already signed a contract to leave for America while filming "Faust" and "Tartuffe".
Janet Bergstrom, University of California , writes that with the film "Faust", among others, Murnau had "unchained the camera" with moving shots that seemed unique...sweeping the audience's emotions with them". Of these moving shots, Bergstrom brings to our attention tracking shots that were photographed above their subject by having rails mounted on the ceiling of the studio.
The use of a mobile camera by Murnau is clearly referred to by Robert Herlth, a designer of sets on the film "Faust", who wrote on the lighting of the film in a chapter entitled "With Murnau on the Set" included in the volume Murnau, published by Lotte H. Eisner. The set designer quotes Murnau as having said, " 'Now how are we going to get the effect of the design? This is too light. Everything must be made much more shadowy.' And so all four of us set about to trying to cut the light...We used them (screens) to define space and create shadows on the wall and in the air. For Murnau, the lighting became part of the actual directing of the film.'"
The periodical Photoplay Magazine during 1927 explained that F.W. Murnau had again resorted to literary adaptation for subject matter, "Goethe's panaoramic poem has been used as its basis and the adaptation was folowed, in the main, as closely as the screen permits...Murnau has caught the medieval atmosphere with suprising success." F.W. Murnau had actually jotted Goethe's name on one of his shootingscripts. Lotte H. Eisner, in his volume Murnau, writes that the script for "Faust", written by poet Hans Kyser, had originally contained a Walpurgisnacht, which may have only reluctantly have been elimanted from a script annotated by the director Murnau in order to "translate the text into visual terms and give directions to actors in terms ofimages."
silent film
Silent Horror Film
Silent Horror
Scott Lord Silent Film: Gosta Ekman in Faust (F.W. Murnau, 1926)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
The immanent departure of director F.W. Murnau for America had already been announced by the periodical Motion Picture News during late 1925 while Murnau was readying the film "Faust". It was to star Gosta Ekman, "a young Swedish actor who has the title role. He has been a star on the legitimate stage and is now making his first appearance in pictures." Scholar Janet Bergstrom, University of California notes that F.W Murnau had recieced a letter from William Fox during 1925 prompted by the success of "The Last Laugh" (Der Letze Mann) and had already signed a contract to leave for America while filming "Faust" and "Tartuffe".
Janet Bergstrom, University of California , writes that with the film "Faust", among others, Murnau had "unchained the camera" with moving shots that seemed unique...sweeping the audience's emotions with them". Of these moving shots, Bergstrom brings to our attention tracking shots that were photographed above their subject by having rails mounted on the ceiling of the studio.
The use of a mobile camera by Murnau is clearly referred to by Robert Herlth, a designer of sets on the film "Faust", who wrote on the lighting of the film in a chapter entitled "With Murnau on the Set" included in the volume Murnau, published by Lotte H. Eisner. The set designer quotes Murnau as having said, " 'Now how are we going to get the effect of the design? This is too light. Everything must be made much more shadowy.' And so all four of us set about to trying to cut the light...We used them (screens) to define space and create shadows on the wall and in the air. For Murnau, the lighting became part of the actual directing of the film.'"
The periodical Photoplay Magazine during 1927 explained that F.W. Murnau had again resorted to literary adaptation for subject matter, "Goethe's panaoramic poem has been used as its basis and the adaptation was folowed, in the main, as closely as the screen permits...Murnau has caught the medieval atmosphere with suprising success." F.W. Murnau had actually jotted Goethe's name on one of his shootingscripts. Lotte H. Eisner, in his volume Murnau, writes that the script for "Faust", written by poet Hans Kyser, had originally contained a Walpurgisnacht, which may have only reluctantly have been elimanted from a script annotated by the director Murnau in order to "translate the text into visual terms and give directions to actors in terms ofimages."
silent film
Silent Horror Film
Silent Horror
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
01 Oct 02:58
Scott Lord Silent Film: (Hårda viljor (Brunius, 1923)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Swedish Silent Film director John W. Brunius during 1922 directed actress Lilla Bye and Linnea Hillberg in the film "Harda Viljer", cowritten by Brunius and Sam Ask, the film was photographed by cinematographer Hugo Edlund.
Silent Film
John Brunius
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 2 others like this
01 Oct 02:57
Monogram Studios, Boris Karloff as Mr. Wong
by Unknown
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and one other like this
01 Oct 02:56
Silent Sherlock Holmes
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and one other like this
01 Oct 02:56
The Moonstone
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:56
Mystery from Monogram Studios, Boris Karloff as Mr. Wong
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:56
Boris Karloff in The Mystery of Mr Wong
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:56
Mystery: Boris Karloff as Mr Wong, Detective
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:56
Mr Wong in Chinatown
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Boris Karloff as Mr. Wong: Doomed To Die
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Boris Karloff as Mr. Wong in The Fatal Hour
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Scott Lord: Sherlock Holmes- A Study In Scarlet
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord Mystery Film and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Scott Lord: Vampyr (Carl Th. Dreyer, 1932)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Scott Lord Silent Film: The Phantom of the Opera (Jullian, 1925)
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Sherlock Holmes Trailers- House of Fear
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Sherlock Holmes Trailers-Scarlet Claw
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this
01 Oct 02:55
Scott Lord Mystery: The Mummy’s Hand theatrical trailer
by Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film
Scott Lord, Scott Lord and 3 others like this