788 stories
·
3 followers

Swedish Silent Film: The Monastery of Sendomir (Victor Sjostr...

1 Share
SILENT Film Silent FILM silent film Victor Sjostrom
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
2 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Swedish Silent Film

1 Share
SILENT FILM SILENT FILM Swedish Silent Film silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
2 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Silent Film 's guestbook

1 Share

Silent Film

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
2 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Lon Chaney in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Worsley, 1923)

3 Shares

Lon Chaney

Tags:

Read the whole story
victorseastrom
8 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
8 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: The Great Train Robbery (Porter,1903)

3 Shares

Silent Film

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
8 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
26 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Swedish Silent Film: Anna Hofmann-Uddren.

3 Shares

Swedish Silent Film pioneer Anna Hofmann-Uddren began filming for Orientaliska Teatern in 1911 with the film "Stockholmsdamemas alskling" starring Carl Barklind, Sigurd Wallen, Erica Tomberg and Anna-Lisa Hellstrom. The film is presumed lost, with no surving existing copies. For a brief period of time, actors Victor Sjostrom and Mauritz Stiller, then new to filmmaking, would be rivalled by film versions of the plays of August Strindberg before their having aquired world renown for establishing the Golden Age of Swedish Silent film with the film "Terje Vigen" (Victor Sjostrom,1916), based on Ibsen's poem.
Read the whole story
victorseastrom
8 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
8 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 2

Greta Garbo: Greta Garbo in (The Temptress, Fred Niblo, 1926)

1 Share
Greta Garbo: Greta Garbo in (The Temptress, Fred Niblo, 1926): Greta Garbo as continuance of Vamp while waiting for the next film to be made by Greta Garbo , Photoplay magazine during 1926 printed, ... silent film Silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
12 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: The Country Doctor (D.W. Griffith, Biograph, 1909)

2 Shares
One technique used to present narrative by D.W. Griffith, although the principle thematic action was two interior scenes connected by cutting on action, was to introduce the film with an exterior panning shot as the establishing shot. The film is concluded with a similar exterior shot which pans in the opposite direction to imply the story had reached an irrevocable conclusion.
Written and directed by D.W. Griffith for the Biograph Film Company the film stars Gladys Egan, Mary Pickford, Florence Lawrence and Kate Bruce. D.W.Griffith D.W. Griffith Biograph Film Company
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
12 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Greta Garbo Mauritz Stiller

1 Share

Mauritz Stiller

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
12 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Mary Pickford in The Mender of Nets (Biograph Film Company, D.W. Griffith, 1912)

1 Share
During 1912 D.W. Griffith directed Mary Pickford,Mabel Normand and Maugeritte Marsh in "The Mender of Nets", photographed by G.W. Bittzer. Biograph Film Company Silent Film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
15 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

A Jersey Girl in Downtown Boston

2 Shares
Donna and I were having lunch in Downtown Boston, the West End near Boston Garden at Jersey Mike's Sub Shop and I looked up and noticed they originated in Point Pleasant, New Jersey. Donna is from Tom's River, New Jersey where she went to highschool but her father was the principal at the high school in Point Pleasant. She thinks she would have been more popular had she gone to highschool there. Mike's Jersey Sub shop just opened recently in Downtown Boston and we hadn't been there before. Scott Lord Donna and I just celebrated our fourteenth anniversary and have lived together for fourteen years, near the West End of Boston, just over the River, in Cambridge, Massachusetts where we can see the Boston Garden and Boston Science Museum from the thirteenth floor.
Read the whole story
· ·
scottlordpoet
15 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Swedish Silent Film

3 Shares



silent film Swedish Silent Film
Read the whole story
victorseastrom
15 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
15 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 3

Scott Lord Mystery: The Vanishing Shadow (Friedlander, 1934) Chapter One...

1 Share
mystery silent film scott lord
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
19 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: America (D.W. Griffith, 1924)

2 Shares

D.W. Griffith

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
19 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Greta Garbo before Hollywood- Einar Hanson

1 Share

Motion Picture News explained that Corrinne Griffith would begin filming "Into Her Kingdom", based on a nobel by Ruth Comfort Mitchell, upon the completion of the film "Mllo. Modiste" of which she was then currently on the set.
The photo caption beneath Einar Hanson's photograph Picture Play Magazine read, "Einar Hanson, who, made his debut in Corinne Griffith's Into her Kingdom is romantic adventurous, much more like a Latin than Scandinavian." In the article Two Gentlemen from Sweden, Myrtle Gebhardt relates about having dinner with him, her having at first hoped to interview Lars Hanson and Einar Hanson together in the same room. "For it appeared that Einar was working not for Metro, but for First National...Two evenings later I ringed spaghetti around my fork in a nook of an Italian cafe with Einar Hansen...Prepared for a big, blond man, whose bland face would be overspread with seriousness, I was startled by his breathtaking resemblance to Jack Gilbert. "Ya," he admitted, "Down the street I drive and all the girls call, 'Hello Yack' and I wave to them."

Motion Picture News announced the decision for the directorial assignment to the film with Director or Interpreter, "Svend Gade, the Danish director now making Into Her Kingdom is wondering whether he is engaged as a megaphone weirder or interpreter. In directing Miss Griffith, of course, he uses English; but Einar Hanson receives his instructions in Swedish" Meanwhile it also introduced Griffith's co-star, "Einar Hansen, 'The Swedish Barrymore' has arrived in Hollywood to appear opposite Corinne Griffith in her newest First National starring vehicle, Into Her Kingdom, by Ruth Comfort Mitchell." it had been announced by the magazine during early 1926 that, "Corinne Griffith is already planning to start work the first week of March on Into Her Kingdom though now she is only now finishing Mlle. Moditte, both of which are to be First National releases. It is uncertain whether a viewable copy of "Into Her Kingdom" exists, it has appeared as a lost film among films listed as not surviving made by First National, and it seems omitted on lists of lost silent films as either being missing or as being surviving, but at any rate locating a copy held by a museum which preserve films seems beyond public access.
     There is also every indication that there is no existing copy of "The Lady in Ermine" (seven reels, James Flood) in which Einar Hanson starred with Corinne Griffith during 1927.

Motion Picture Magazine in 1927 published an oval portrait of Einar Hansen with the caption, "In Fashions for Women, Einar is the first man to be directed by Paramount's first woman director. How's that for a record? Incidentally, Einar has become a popular leading man as quickly as anyone that ever invaded Hollywood." The caption to the somber portrait published in Picture Play magazine that year held a more sundry description, "Einar Hansen, the young man from Sweden who looks so like a Latin has fared well during his year in this country. he is now under contract to Paramount and has the lead opposite Esther Ralston in Fashions For Women." The film was the first directed by Dorothy Azner, who had worked uncredited with Fred Niblo on Blood and Sand. Gladys Unger, who a year later worked on the scenario to the film "The Divine Woman" (Victor Seastrom), wrote the screenplay to the film "Fashions for Women". The running length of the film consisted of seven reels. The periodical Exhibitor's Herald explained that it was the first starring vehicle for actress Esther Ralston and the first venture weilding the microphone" for director Dortohy Arzner.
Einar Hanson appeared with Anna Q. Nilsson in the film "The Masked Woman" (six reels) during 1927. The film is presently presumed to be lost with no known surving copies existing.
     Of the film "Children of Divorce", Motion Picture News wrote, "It is a picture which is easy to guess the denoument...Frank Lloyd, the director, has overcome much of the plot shortcomings with his lighting and other technical efforts. he provided some charming settings and gotten every ounce of dramatic flavoring from the story." Joseph Von Sternberg's work on the film is uncredited.
     
     Essayist Tommy Gustafsson almost besmirches Einar Hanson by claiming him to have a Bohemian image, that while carrying with it a "soft masculinity", appeared "unsound" when part of his after hours social life, although the author doesn't specifically include Gosta Ekman, Mauritz Stiller or Greta Garbo leaving it only a generic impression. He noted that there was a posthumous "negative attitude" toward Hanson due to "considerable media exposure he received for 'Pirates of Lake Malaren' and 'The Blizzard' as well as great commotion surrounding the trial following his car accident the same year...This is an example of a new connecting link, a kind of intertexuality, that was created between the real people and the characters they played." Gustafsson stops there, only to infer, without making an obvious conclusion and before speculating that Stiller had brought Garbo and Sjostrom to the United States to avoid having been placed in any nocturnal subculture or artistic society of artists that may not have been entirely accepted in Sweden or Europe. 

The body of Einar Hanson was crushed between the steering wheel and a ten inch drainpipe along the highway. Photoplay Magazine reported, "Here is a tragedy- and a mystery. Einar Hansen was found fatally injured, pinned beneath his car on the ocean road. Earlier in the evening, he had given a dinner party for Greta Garbo, Swedish Silent Film director Mauritz Stillerand Dr. And Mrs. Gistav Borkman...Hanson was unmarried and he is survived by he parents in Stockholm."

Hanson had filmed in Europe before coming to the United States. In his native Denmark, he had appeared in the Danish silent film So "Bilberries" ("Misplaced Highbrows", "Takt, Ture Og Tosser", Lau Lauritzen, 1924) and "Mists of the Past" (Fra Plazza del Polo, Anders W. Sandberg, 1925), the latter having starred Karina Bell. In Sweden, Einar Hanson starred with Inga Tiblad in "Malarpirater", written and directed by Gustaf Molander in 1924 and with Mona Martenson in "Skeppargatan 40", directed by Gustaf Edgren in 1925.

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

Danish Silent Film

Remade by Greta Garbo

Silent Film
Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · ·
scottlordpoet
19 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Silent Garbo

2 Shares

Silent Garbo

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
26 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
31 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: An Unseen Enemy (D.W. Griffith, Biograph 1912)

2 Shares
The year 1912 was to mark the first film with Lillian and Dorothy Gish, “An Unseen Enemy” (one reel), directed by D.W. Griffith. Lillian and Dorothy Gish appeared in a dozen two reel films together during 1912 and several more during 1913. In The Man Who Invented Hollywood, the autobiography of D.W. Griffith, published in 1972, Griffith outlines his arriving at the Biograph Film Company and adding actors, including Mary Pickford,tohis ensemble. Griffith recalls, "One day in the early summer of 1909, I was going through the dingy, old hall of the Biograph studio when suddenly the gloom seemed to disappear. The change was caused by the prescence of two young girls sitting side by side and on a hall bench...They were Lillian Gish and Dorothy Gish. Of the two, Lillian shone with an extremely fragile, ethereal beauty...As for Dorothy, she was lovely too, but in another manner- pert, saucy, the old mischief popping out of her." Actress Lilian Gish, in her autobiography, The Movies, Mr. Griffith and Me writes,"Mr. Griffith had rehearsed 'The Unseen Enemy' with other actresses, but after meeting us, he decided we would be suitable for the leads and changed the plot just enough to fit us."
Silent Film


Lillian and Dorothy Gish Biograph Film Company
Read the whole story
· ·
victorseastrom
19 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
26 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Mary Pickford in The Mender of Nets (Biograph Film, D.W. Griffith, 1912)

2 Shares
From: ScottLordnovelist
Duration: 12:47
Views: 17

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
26 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 4

Scott Lord Mystery: The Vanishing Shadow (Louis Friedlander, 1934) Chapt...

1 Share
silent film silent film silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
28 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: The Cardinal’s Conspiracy (D.W. Griffith, 1909)

3 Shares

Notably, Mary Pickford and James Kirkwood, who would later become her director, appear under the direction of D. W. Griffith in the one reeler "The Cardinal's Conspiracy", along with Mack Sennet as well as Griffith's wife Linda Ardvidson and actress Kate Bruce. The film was photographed by G.W. Bitzer for the Biograph Film Company.
The periodical Moving Picture World reviewed the film with an early description approaching genre theory. "The picture is of the costume kind. In other words, one, when looking at it, has gone to the pages of Stanely Weyman, Henry Harland or Morris Hewitt for his inspiration. We breathe the atmosphere of court life and are taken back, as it were, into a far more romantic period than the present." The periodical continued by regretting that they had viewed the film in "cold monochrome" rather than a more vibrant spectrum of pageant. Biograph Films had advertised the film in the previous issue of Moving Picture World, sharing the full page with Selig, Independent and Kalem studios. Paired with the film "Friend of the Family", Biograph proclaimed that in the film "The Cardinal's Conspiracy", "The subject is elaborately staged, comprising some of the most beautiful exterior scenes ever shown."In her autobiography When The Movies Were Young, Griffith's wife Linda Arvidson sees the film as the first important screen characterization for actor Frank Powell, adding him to the "remarkable trio" at Biograph of actors Frank Powell, James Kirkwood and Henry B. Walthall. Tom Gunning points to the film belonging to a period when a cinema of narrative integration in fact centered on characterization and accordingly developed film technique with that in mind. To accomadate that narrative integration and its movement to a versimilar acting rather than the florid, histrionic gestures of a filmed theater, Griffith would bring the camera into the story.
Silent Film Silent Film
Read the whole story
· ·
victorseastrom
28 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
28 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Donna

3 Shares

Scott Lord
Read the whole story
victorseastrom
31 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
31 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Swedish Silent Film

2 Shares

Swedish Silent Film

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
31 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Paul Revere on the 250th anniversary of the Midnight Ride

1 Share
victorseastrom shared this story from Scott Lord.

Please note that the Midnight Ride of Paul Revere occurred the day before The Shot Heard Round the World, as was its purpose. During 1772, Paul Revere had made church bells manufactured from copper and tin for several of the churches in Boston.
This is the view of Paul Revere's grave from inside the church, on Brimstone corner, a granary used to store gunpowder during the revolution. Donna is cataloging book donations in the library- I have lunch overlooking the graveyard. Today is Palm Sunday.
Scott Lord
Silent Film This New England Primer bridged the "Gap" during the shift from Ecclesiastical Puritan to Patriotic Colonial.
Read the whole story
· · · · ·
scottlordpoet
31 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Victor Seastrom Greta Garbo

1 Share

Victor Sjostrom

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
35 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 5

Scott Lord Mystery: The Vanishing Shadow (Friedlander, 1934) Chapter One: Accused of Murder

3 Shares
From: victorseaful
Duration: 21:06
Views: 217

Scott Lord Mystery: The Vanishing Shadow

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
35 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
35 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Mystery: The Vanishing Shadow (Louis Friedlander, 1934) Chapt...

1 Share
silent film silent film silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
35 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Blogger: User Profile: Scott Lord on Silent Film, Scott Lord on Mystery Film

1 Share

Scott Lord

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
38 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Biblical Drama, Sign of the Cross (Frederick A Thomson, 1914)

2 Shares
From: ScottLordnovelist
Duration: 1:07:32
Views: 43

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
39 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
41 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)

2 Shares
The periodical Motion Picture News during 1926 the filming of "Temptress" with a review entitled "Greta Garbo in the Title Role of 'The Temptress'. It read,"Greta Garbo, Swedish actress, will have the title role in Cosmopolitan's production of 'The Temptress, which will be a Metro Goldwyn Mayer release directed by Mauritz Stiller. She is now working in 'Ibanez' The Torrent'." Greta Garbo had in fact signed to do the film on the condition that Stiller was to direct.
Author Forsyth Hardy, in his volume Scandinavian Film, curtly, only briefly mentions that Mauritz Stiller was removed as director of the film after a disagreement with Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Biographer William Stewart, in The True Life Story of Greta Garbo gives an account purporting that Mauritz Stiller "had not yet mastered the American method of making pictures. Handling crowds gave him trouble and his lack of English made every move difficult."
Biographer William Stweart, in his volume The True Life Story of Greta Garbo claims that Greta Garbo had begun her living as a recluse and refusing to be seen in public as early as the film "The Torrent", excerpts from the biography reprinted in the oeriodical Modern Screen during 1937 quoting the actress as having turned journalists away with "I have nothing to wear." The biography gives an account that the young Garbo soon relented to the studio and its demands for publicity.
Silent Film Greta Garbo Victor Seastrom
Read the whole story
· ·
scottlordpoet
39 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
41 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Biblical Drama, Sign of the Cross (Frederick A T...

2 Shares
Silent Film
Read the whole story
victorseastrom
39 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
39 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 6

Scott Lord Silent Film: Pearl White in The Perils of Pauline, The Shatter...

1 Share
Silent Film
The Swedish censorship of 1911 prevented "The Perils of Pauline from becoming familiar to audieneces in Sweden. Marina Dahlquist, in her article "The Best Known Woman in the World" writes that the cliffhanger "constituted precisely the type of films that the Swedish national censorship body was ser up to weed out from the market, aside from sexually tinged Danish melodrama." Dahlquist adds that there had also been a lack of publicity for the film, a lack of dvertising, or "newspaper-magazine tie ins".
Silent Film
Perils of Pauline, Silent Cliffhanger
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
41 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

: Vampyr (Carl Th. Dreyer, 1932)

1 Share
SILENT FILM SILENT FILM silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
41 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)

2 Shares

Greta Garbo

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
41 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
47 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)

2 Shares
greta garbo greta gabo greta garbo
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
45 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Danish Silent Film: Sherlock Holmes at Elsinore

1 Share
scottlordpoet shared this story from Soon to be revise: Swedish Film.

Danish Silent Film: Sherlock Holmes at Elsinore Danish Silent Film Silent Film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
45 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman (1928, Victor Sjostrom)

1 Share

Victor Sjostrom Greta Garbo

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
47 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 7

Danish Silent Film: Sherlock Holmes at Elsinore

1 Share
Danish Silent Film: Sherlock Holmes at Elsinore Danish Silent Film Silent Film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
47 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

The Mummys Ghost-CastleFilms 8mm

2 Shares

silent film mystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
47 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman (1928, Victor Sjostrom)

3 Shares

"The Divine Woman" directed in the United States during 1928 featured three Swedish Silent Film stars from the Golden Age of Swedish Silent film, two of whom, Victor Sjostrom and Lars Hanson, would soon return to Sweden to mark the advent of sound film. Sjostrom would return to act and only act, in front of the camera rather than behind it. Only one reel of the film survives, it being presumed lost with no other footage of the film surviving other than the fragment.
Bo Florin, Stockholm University, in his volume Transition and Transformation- Victor Sjostrom in Hollywood 1923-1930, looks as a film detective not only to film critics and magazine articles printed during the first run of the film, as I have, this webpage in fact subtitled "Lost Films, Found Magazines", (please excuse the trendy contemporary use of subtitles during peer review) but also to the the cutting continuity script, his finding a specific sequence where Sjostrom uses "a combination between iris and dissolve", one which, as an iris down, fulfills the "classic Sjostrom function of an analogy". There are two other dissolves in the same sequence that are used as transitions, spatial transitions, yet both are taken from different camera distances. Again, no footage from r the scene or the reel it is from survives. One can ask if double exposures were only infrquently published in magazines or advertisements as publicity stills, or even as lobby cards or posters and if modern audiences have ever seen photographs from the scene.
Victor Sjostrom and Greta Garbo
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
54 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
54 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman (1928, Victor Sjostrom)

1 Share

Victor Seastrom Greta Garbo

Tags: 'Victor Sjostrom' greta garbo

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
54 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)

3 Shares
From: ScottLordnovelist
Duration: 1:45:19
Views: 47

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
54 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
54 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Mystery: Fay Wray

1 Share


Scott Lord Silent Film silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
57 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 8

Scott Lord: Sherlock Holmes- A Study In Scarlet

1 Share


Silent Film mystery mystery mystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
57 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Greta Garbo Victor Sjostrom

3 Shares

Victor Seastrom Greta Garbo

Tags: 'Victor Sjostrom'

Read the whole story
victorseastrom
57 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
57 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Fay Wray in The Evil Mind

1 Share

Silent Film mystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
59 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Swedish Silent Film - YouTube

1 Share

Swedish Silent Film

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
59 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Sherlock Holmes, The Man With the Twisted Lip (E...

1 Share
silent filmmystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
61 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord:Sherlock Holmes-Sherlock Holmes And The Secret Weapon

1 Share


Scott Lord silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
61 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 9

Victor Seastrom - YouTube

3 Shares

Victor Sjostrom

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
61 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
61 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1921

3 Shares
Motion Picture News during 1921 readily boasted that more than seven different types of "exploitations" were used to advertise the film "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" starring Rudolph Valentino. Motion Picture Directing, published in 1922, showed a director Rex Ingram using a white, square canvass reflector to exploit sunlight during the filming of exterior scenes.
Author Benjamin B Hampton, in his volume A History of Movies, discusses the rise of screenwriter June Mathis to producer with the film "The Fourhorseman of the Apocalypse" and her effort to "plan the details of camerawork before photography began. This process of planning had been shared by Tucker and a few other directors who called it 'shooting the story on paper before shooting it on film'. 'Shooting on paper'...requires highly trained technical knowledge, clear thinking, a power of visualization and a rounded conception of the picture before camerawork begins. Its advantages are low cost production."
The film was based on the novel writtenby Vincente Ibanez.
Silent film Rudolph Valentino
Read the whole story
· · · · · · · ·
scottlordpoet
63 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
84 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Mystery: Warner Oland as Dr. Fu Man Chu in Daughter of the Dr...

1 Share
mystery mystery silent film
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
63 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Mystery: Warner Oland in The Mysterious Dr. Fu Man Chu (1929)

1 Share
silent film mystery mystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
63 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Mystery: The Mystic (Tod Browning, 1926)

2 Shares
mystery silent film mystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
66 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Silent Film: Lon Chaney in The Unholy Three (Tod Browning, 1925)

1 Share
silent film mystery mystery
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
66 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories
Loading...
Page 10

Another rainbow

1 Share
victorseastrom shared this story from Scott Lord.

b'
(There might be some dust on the windows as we are under construction and of course I am not using a camera) Another rainbow. In the distance you can spot the Bunker Hill monument. We no loner have a terrace after ten years, but the room is larger.'
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
67 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: The Craving (John and Francis Ford, 1919)

3 Shares
In the extratextural discourse that may have developed the confections of genre, Motion Picture Weekly published press sheets for Bluebird's "sensational melodrama" "The Craving" with "Suggestions for Putting This Picture Over", their having announced that in some shots of its "remarkable photography" there were "as many as four distinct exposures" that would "make audiences gasp." The film's "Distinctive Feature" was "mysterious illusions of weird beauty."
Silent Film
Read the whole story
victorseastrom
67 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
67 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Paul Revere on the 250th anniversary of the Midnight Ride

3 Shares
Please note that the Midnight Ride of Paul Revere occurred the day before The Shot Heard Round the World, as was its purpose. During 1772, Paul Revere had made church bells manufactured from copper and tin for several of the churches in Boston.
This is the view of Paul Revere's grave from inside the church, on Brimstone corner, a granary used to store gunpowder during the revolution. Donna is cataloging book donations in the library- I have lunch overlooking the graveyard. Today is Palm Sunday.
Scott Lord
Silent Film This New England Primer bridged the "Gap" during the shift from Ecclesiastical Puritan to Patriotic Colonial.
Read the whole story
· · · · ·
victorseastrom
67 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
67 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: The Invaders (Ince, 1912)

1 Share

Silent Film

Tags:

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
70 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

I introduced myself to Dr. Sundquist, usually I greet Dr. Elaine Phillips after church service

1 Share
While Donna was busy in the library, I very awkwardly introduced myself to President of Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary, and after years and years of living in Boston I really said something like 'are you whom I think' while telling him that I had seen his books and had always looked forward to meeting him- all of which was ok, but honestly, I probably just hadn't had had coffee... Usually Dr. Elaine Phillips is here and does answer questions about Scripture occaisionally.
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
70 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: The Deluge (Vitagraph, 1911)

1 Share
silent film Scott Lord
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet
70 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories