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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.

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kathy

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Lady Windermere’s Fan

In June of 1925 Motion Picture World announced “‘Lady Windermere’s Fan’ Is Lubitsch’s New Warner Film.” Industry insiders must have marveled at the news that Rin Tin Tin, Warners’ profitable pup, would soon be sharing space with the dead, gay, Irish playwright whose 1892 hit play was known for … [Read more...] about Lady Windermere’s Fan

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Lady of the Pavements

Lady of the Pavements opened in 1929 to rave reviews. Although directed by the distinguished D.W. Griffith, recognized as a master even then, it was Lupe Vélez’s performance both on and off screen that got all the attention. While Griffith was reinventing his style with the emergence of sound, Vélez … [Read more...] about Lady of the Pavements

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Lady of the Night

In the 1930s, Norma Shearer was the Queen of MGM. She had elegant screen presence, a string of successful films, and an Oscar—and she was married to Irving Thalberg, the studio’s head of production. (As driven and ambitious as Shearer, Joan Crawford famously quipped, “What chance do I have? She … [Read more...] about Lady of the Night

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

A Kiss From Mary Pickford

When Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks visited Moscow on a vacation trip in 1926, they were the most famous couple in the world. Among the first Hollywood celebrities, they were idolized everywhere, even in the Soviet Union, where audiences preferred American and German films to groundbreaking … [Read more...] about A Kiss From Mary Pickford

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Kings of (Silent) Comedy

FELIX GOES WEST Directed by Otto Messmer, USA, 1924 With a few exceptions—notably Winsor McCay’s 1914 Gertie the Dinosaur—early film animation made little impact until 1919. That’s when producer Pat Sullivan’s Feline Follies, starring the rowdy cat Master Tom, captured the public’s attention. A … [Read more...] about Kings of (Silent) Comedy

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Kid Brother

In the 1960s and 1970s, the only exposure to silent films available to most Americans was on syndicated television programs like Fractured Flickers, which played the films at a faster-than-normal speed and featured narration that mocked the films and the actors. The Harold Lloyd Show, which … [Read more...] about The Kid Brother

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

The Kid

If the 12 Mutual-Chaplin Specials of 1916–1917 served as Chaplin’s early comedic laboratory, the best of the films he created for the First National Exhibitors’ Circuit reveal a filmmaker growing into his full artistic power. The First Nationals contain some of Chaplin’s best constructed and most … [Read more...] about The Kid

Filed Under: Essay

January 15, 2020 By kathy

Kevin Brownlow: Monumental Man

An Appreciation A film collector since the age of eleven, the British-born Kevin Brownlow is responsible in large part for the revival of silent-film art around the world. Brownlow’s tireless sleuthing has led to the rediscovery of many of Hollywood’s silent-film landmarks, … [Read more...] about Kevin Brownlow: Monumental Man

Filed Under: Feature

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