Presented at the Paramount Theatre, Oakland on December 2, 2010 The San Francisco Silent Film Festival, with the Pacific Film Archive and the Paramount Theatre presented Voices of Light/The Passion of Joan of Arc, an Oratorio with Silent Film on Thursday, December 2, 2010 at 7:30pm at Oakland's … [Read more...] about Voices of Light / The Passion of Joan of Arc
Vitaphone Vaudeville, 1926-1930
FILMS Between the Acts at the Opera (1926) starring Willie and Eugene Howard Chips Off the Old Block (1928) starring The Foy Family Harlem Mania (1929) starring The Norman Thomas Quintette You Don’t Know the Half Of It (1928) starring Butler and Brennan Dick Rich and His Melodious … [Read more...] about Vitaphone Vaudeville, 1926-1930
Visages d’enfants
In his epic multivolume Histoire du cinéma, French film theoretician and historian Jean Mitry wrote, “If I had to choose one film of all the French productions of the 1920s, it is undoubtedly Visages d’enfants I would save … It is the only one that is still modern today.” That was written more than … [Read more...] about Visages d’enfants
Varieté
One of the outstanding examples of the mid-twenties golden age of German cinema, Ewald André Dupont’s Varieté has a plot that would work nicely for a late-forties film noir, complete with an alluring femme fatale, betrayal, and death. It begins in a bleak prison where Boss Huller (Emil Jannings) is … [Read more...] about Varieté
Variations on a Theme: Matti Bye, Soundscape Artist
I had two big passions when I was a boy in Stockholm—music and film. Every day I practiced classical piano and, in the evenings, I went to screenings at the city’s cinematheque. One day in 1989, a member of the staff asked me if I could accompany a silent film at an upcoming screening of … [Read more...] about Variations on a Theme: Matti Bye, Soundscape Artist
The Valley of the Giants
It’s often lamented that only ten to twenty per cent of films made in the silent era still exist. So whenever a coveted film thought lost suddenly turns up, it’s just cause for celebration. But what of the many worthy films no one is looking for, their directors neglected, their stars forgotten, … [Read more...] about The Valley of the Giants
Upstream
Most filmgoers think of John Ford primarily as a director of westerns, with 1939’s Stagecoach as his first important film. However, of Ford’s more than 140 titles, only about a third are westerns and nearly half are silents of which only 15 percent survive. The discovery in 2009 of a complete print … [Read more...] about Upstream
Upstage
When Upstage, originally known as The Mask of Comedy, opened in 1926, it was praised for its behind the scenes look at the life of traveling vaudevillians. “The troupers are shown in their dressing rooms, in the restaurant, and even at the railroad station. You sense the tediousness of the existence … [Read more...] about Upstage