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05 Mar 04:08

Scott Lord Silent Film: Madge Bellamy in Soul of the Beast (John Griffit...

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
04 Mar 02:13

The Photoplay: Silent Movie Lobby Cards, Lon Chaney

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
03 Mar 04:45

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: Anna Christie (John Griffith Wray, 1923)

01 Mar 03:17

Scott Lord Silent Film: Frances Howard in The Swan (Dimitri Buchowetzki,...

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
Author Paul Rotha, in his volume The Film Till Now, seems to have begun a retrospective on the work of film director Dimitri Buchowetski, "Of other European directors who have had their fling in Hollywood, Dimitri Buchowetski has not been successful." He apparently lacks the need to include Buchowetski having been taken of the set of the Greta Garbo film "Love", much like Mauritz Stiller had been taken of the set of the Greta Garbo film "The Temptress", and continues to asses other unsuccesul directors by merely listing them. The review of "The Swan" (six reels) in the periodical "Film Daily" from 1925 predates Rotha, "Tinselled Production That Glitters With The Best Art Directors Can Give and the Best Buchowtski Direction" It noted the film's direction by Buchowetski as having been "excellant", claiming "his unusual skill is displayed throughout." Buchowetski wrote and directed the film. His cameraman was Alvynn Wycoff. Silent Film Victor Sjostrom The Grand Duchess and the Waiter
27 Feb 06:35

The Photoplay: Silent Movie Lobby Cards, Mary Pickford

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
27 Feb 03:37

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: Lon Chaney in Outside the Law (Tod Browning, 1920)

27 Feb 03:18

Scott Lord Silent Film: Lon Chaney in Outside the Law (Tod Browning, 1920)

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
"Outside the Law" (eight reels), directed by Tod Browning during 1920, was coscripted by Browning with Gardner Bradford and Lucien Hubbard and photographed by William Fildew. The films stars Lon Chaney and actress Priscilla Dean. Advertisements placed in the periodical Motion Picture News annouced Leo McCarey as first executive assistant to Tod Browning, whom it credited with not only being the film's director but its "Author". The Film Daily reviewed its direction as being "uniformly excellent" but its story as lacking stregnth although lifted by its actors Lon Chaney and Priscilla Dean.
Motion PIcture News reintroduced Tod Browning to its readers during 1921 as one of the youngest directors, then still in his thirties, whom D.W.Griffith had brought to Hollywood while with Mutual, which led to Browning directing two-reelers at Majestic. While reviewing "Outside the Law" the periodical credited Tod Browning, "master of melodrama" with priviledged knowledge of "underworld haunts". It reminded readers that they had seen Lon Chaney and Priscilla Dean together in the film "The Wicked Darling."
The later film, "Outside the Law" was directed by Tod Browning during 1930 but has different characters than the earlier film, his having coscripted the film with Garret Fort. The film was photographed by Roy Overbaugh and starred actress Mary Nolan. Lon Chaney Lon Chaney Silent Film
Silent Film
26 Feb 02:54

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: Douglas Fairbanks in When the Clouds Roll By (V...

24 Feb 03:35

Scott Lord Silent Film: Douglas Fairbanks in When the Clouds Roll By (V...

Tags: silent film

22 Feb 07:24

Scott Lord Silent Film: Douglas Fairbanks in When the Clouds Roll By (V...

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
Victor Fleming, who appeared onscreen in the film as himself, directed Douglas Fairbanks with actress Kathleen Clifford in the film ""When the Clouds Roll BY" (six reels) during 1919 from a photoplay written by Thomas J Geraghty. Fleming had began as a cinematographer for director Alan Dwan. Victor Flemming the following year directed Douglas Fairbanks in the film "The Mollycoddle".
During 1919 Douglas Fairbanks starred with Marjorie Daw in the five reel film "Knickerbocker Buckaroo", which he wrote under the pseudonym Elton Thomas (Elton Banks). Directed by Albert Parker the film is presumed lost, with no existing surviving copies.
Silent Film

In regard to "Lost Films, Found Magazines" a theme in the historiography of my archive on the internet:like the subtitle of a thesis- although the film "A Knickerbocker Buckaroo" does not exist, there being no surviving copies at present, the Exhibitor's Press Book does, providing extratextural discourse to the film within the context of the silent era and at a specific point in Douglas Fairbank's career.
Douglas Fairbanks in Reaching for the Moon
Exhibitor's Trade Review claimed, "You can make good on Big Promises with this 'Knickerbocker Buckaroo'", the publication urging the four column newspaper ad and 24 sheet be used in "A Chance to Cash in on Ad Exploitation".
Douglas Fairbanks
Lost Silent Film
19 Feb 03:01

Scott Lord Silentt Film: Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley (Neilan, 1918)

19 Feb 02:57

Scott Lord Silent Film: A Trip to the Moon (George Melies, 1902)

Tags: silent film

17 Feb 05:58

The Photoplay: Silent Film Lobby Cards

17 Feb 05:47

The Photoplay: Silent Film Lobby Cards

17 Feb 03:26

Scott Lord Silent Film: Mary Pickford in Suds (Dillon, 1920)

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
Silent Film



John Francis Dillon directed Mary Pickford in the film "Suds" (six reels) for the Mary Pickford Company during 1920.
Silent Film Silent Film
Silent Film
17 Feb 02:55

Scott Lord Silent Film: Mary Pickford in Amarilly of Clothes Line Alley (Neilan, 1918)

by Scott Lord on Silent Film

During 1918, Mary Pickford starred in the five reel film "Amarilly of Clothesline Alley", directed by Marshall Neilan with a photoplay scripted by Frances Marion and Bellek Maniates. Actress Margaret Landis also appears in the film. Photoplay Magazine likened the the acting of Mary Pickford in the film to her work in Stella Maris in its being a "remarkable" character study. "All this is done in Mary Pickford's blithest vein, reminding us once more that she is the greatest of all screen actresses." The competition, Picture Play Magazine, afforded the view of a different angle. "This is Mary Pickford's latest, and it contrasts strongly with that highly dramatic subject, "Stella Maris". It is almost entirely in a humorous vein, though there are times when one catches a glimpse of pathos in the character of Amarilly. But there are more laughs than tears."
In a later photocaption, Photoplay Magazine again revealed that this was for Mary Pickford, recognizable commodity, the portrayal of a new character. (Mary Pickford is shown looking at the rushes with director Marshall Neilan, who evidently would have been joining the War to end all wars in Europe had an armistice not occurred.) Silent Film Mary Pickford
17 Feb 02:36

Scott Lord on Silent Film - YouTube

17 Feb 02:33

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: Mary Pickford in 100% American (Arthur Rossen)

17 Feb 02:21

Scott Lord Silent Film: Mary Pickford in 100% American (Arthur Rossen)

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
"She was nice and she was sweet, say many to explain the phenomenon...The reason can only be found in by relating the star to the social and cultural background of the time...Only the American civilization, a civilization materially in advance of the rest of the world could have produced Mary Pickford. We must try to realize the impact of Mary Pickford's appaearance and acting upon the consciousness of the world's population as it existed around 1909."
It is certain that the beginnings of the star system had made Mary Pickford an attractive commodity by 1918 when we had reluctantly taken part in the continuance of an unexpected war- the quote may point to the historical context and extratextural discourse that is a dynamic of that star system. A starsystem that has been called "a culture of celebrity", the silent film era has kept some of its first impressions as long lasting, albeit some were fleeting, authors often making comparisions between fixed points in the firmament, especially when introducing the newest foreign arrival, in as much as an actress was now considered "Sweden's Mary Pickford", or when there was a common theme between Gish, Pickford and Mae Marsh. Although far from the earliest example of film criticism, the quote is from a volume titled The Film Answers Back, an historical appreciation of the cinema. Authored by E.W. + M.M. Robson, it was published in 1939. Oddly, the review of the films of the actress begins to address, not gendered spectatorship, but her femininity within the expectations drawn by a woman on the screen and how it related to being a Suffragete. Notwithstanding, it was that Mary Pickford by then was sought after and Parmount Press Books from 1917 describe her having sold Liberty Bonds as a result of a request from United States Secretary McAdoo, her wearing the insignia of an honarary colonel. The pressbooks announced, "Famous Artcraft Star Stops All Film Activities When Call Comes To Help Country and Flag by Selling Liberty Bonds". Prior to the short 100% American, Mary Pickford released the full legnth feature film "Johanna Enlists", adapted by Frances Marion from the short story The Mobilizing of Johanna, published in 1917.
Returning to the year the film was made and to contrast the on screen images with the extratextural discourse of the off screen lives of actresses, Mary Pickford and Linda A. Griffith during 1918 were given back to back bylines in the periodical Film Fun. The article written by Mary Pickford was a look toward the future of filmmaking, and thereby necessarily lending an assessment of the time period and historical context, her praising the work of Cecil B. DeMille. In turn, Linda A Griffith followed in the same issue and neglected entirely the gendered spectatorship that would view the talented Mary Pickford. She rather discusses Mary Pickford's salary with the claim that her husband, D.W. Griffith, saw her as being underpaid. Griffith's wife subtitled part of her 1918 article with "Adequate Payment for Good Work". There is almost an objective correlative, or perhaps a suspension of disbelief, in our agreement to walk into the theater and enter fictional worlds that the director's wife acknowledges, neglecting those fictional scenarios, while bringing us a real life Mary Pickford, who in fact later returned to sell bonds for the Defence Department during 1953. Silent Film Silent Film
16 Feb 03:18

The Photoplay: Silent Film Lobby Cards, Douglas Fairbanks

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
16 Feb 02:32

The Photoplay: Silent Film Movie Posters

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
15 Feb 05:08

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: The Painted Lady (Griffith, Biograph, 1912)

15 Feb 04:57

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: Sunbeam (Griffith, Biograph, 1913)

13 Feb 04:52

Scott Lord on Film: Mary Pickford in Kiki (Sam Taylor, 1931)

by Scott Lord on Silent Film
The 1931 sound film "Kiki" starring Mary Pickford is a remake of the nine reel silent film with Norma Talmadge as the titular character directed by Clarence Brown and scripted by Hans Kraly. Although, not a lost silent film it has been restored and only exists as incomplete.

Mary Pickford Mary Pickford
Silent Film
11 Feb 02:47

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: The Duchess of Buffalo (Sidney Franklin, 1926)

10 Feb 03:00

Scott Lord Silent Film: Return of Draw Egan (William S. Hart, 1916)

10 Feb 02:58

The Photoplay: Silent Film Movie Posters

09 Feb 02:58

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: The Village Blacksmith (John Ford, 1922)

09 Feb 02:55

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: Return of Draw Egan (William S. Hart, 1916)

09 Feb 02:54

Scandinavian Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom as Seastrom, Mauritz Stiller, John Brunius, Greta Garbo: Scott Lord Silent Film: The Unbeliever (Alan Crosland, Edison Company, 1...