• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
San Francisco Silent Film Festival

San Francisco Silent Film Festival

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival is a nonprofit organization dedicated to educating the public about silent film as an art form and as a culturally valuable historical record.

MENUMENU
  • Events
    • Events

      Murnau’s Nosferatu May 23

      Festival 2025 November 12–16

    • Live Music

      Musicians
      Learn about our musical accompanists

    • Plan Your Trip

      Getting Around

  • Support
    • SUPPORT SFSFF
    • Ways to Support
    • Letter from the Director
    • Grantors and Sponsors
  • Preservation
    • SFSFF Preservation

      • The SFSFF Collection
      • Film Loan Applications
  • Library
    • Library

      • Browse the LibraryRead program articles from past SFSFF events
      • Our MusiciansLearn about SFSFF’s incredible musicians
      • Screening RoomWatch videos from SFSFF Preservation and past live events
      • Event ArchiveExplore past SFSFF events
Sign In Become a Member
Sign In

kathy

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Legong: Dance of the Virgins

Legong: Dance of the Virgins was shot on location in the village of Ubud in Bali, Indonesia, between May and August 1933, and featured an all-Balinese cast. Directed by Henry de la Falaise, whose full name was Henri Marquis Le Bailly de la Falaise de la Coudraye, Legong was one of two films produced … [Read more...] about Legong: Dance of the Virgins

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Laurel and Hardy – Three Shorts

THE FINISHING TOUCH Cast Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Edgar Kennedy (Policeman), Dorothy Coburn (Nurse), Sam Lufkin (House owner) Production Hal Roach Studios, 1928 Director Clyde A. Bruckman Producer Hal Roach Titles H. M. Walker Photography George Stevens Supervisor Leo McCarey Editor Richard … [Read more...] about Laurel and Hardy – Three Shorts

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Last Warning

Something like a postmodern riff on the entire idea of German Expressionism, Paul Leni’s The Last Warning (1929) was the final film for the illustrious Leni who died eight months after its release of blood poisoning at the age of forty-four. Today he’s a neglected figure, even among silent-film … [Read more...] about The Last Warning

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Last Man on Earth

When looking back on the silent films released by Fox Film Corporation, we tend to gravitate toward the early efforts of directors who went on to long and prominent careers: John Ford (The Iron Horse, Four Sons), Frank Borzage (7th Heaven, Street Angel), Howard Hawks (Fazil, A Girl in Every Port), … [Read more...] about The Last Man on Earth

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Last Laugh

The now-forgotten expression “clothes maketh the man” dates to the Middle Ages, but it seems to echo loudest from the early twentieth century when office jobs multiplied in new skyscrapers and country folk migrated to the cities by the tens of thousands. It could have been coined to describe the … [Read more...] about The Last Laugh

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Last Edition

Emory Johnson entered the film business strictly by chance exactly 100 years ago. While a sophomore studying architecture at the University of California in Berkeley, he took a drive through Niles Canyon and came upon a curious sight: a gang of cowboys on horseback firing their guns at a stagecoach. … [Read more...] about The Last Edition

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Last Command

Russia’s frozen inaccessibility, its mink-clad aristocrats, impeccable ballerinas, and candy-colored turrets further piqued American fascination when the Russian Revolution toppled the Romanov dynasty in the second decade of the twentieth century. Hollywood, housing a small community of the former … [Read more...] about The Last Command

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

L’Argent

The sky was the limit during the 1920s as aviators conquered the airways. The first practical airliner, the 12-passenger Ford Trimotor, debuted in 1925. The world’s stock markets also reached for the stratosphere, with the value of common stock rising an average of 22 percent each year from 1925 … [Read more...] about L’Argent

Filed Under: Essay

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 33
  • Go to page 34
  • Go to page 35
  • Go to page 36
  • Go to page 37
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 59
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

How can we help?

info@silentfilm.org 415-777-4908
MENUMENU
  • WRAPPER
        • True Art Transcends Time

        • ABOUT

        • About Us
        • Press Materials
        • Resources
        • SOCIAL

        • Facebook
        • Instagram
        • Subscribe

        • Photos by Pamela Gentile and Tommy Lau.
          Copyright © 2019 San Francisco Silent Film Festival Privacy Terms