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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 14, 2020 By kathy

Gretchen the Greenhorn

Also presented in this program: Original coming attraction trailers from the lost films The Patriot (1928), directed by Ernst Lubitsch and starring Emil Jannings, which won the 1929 Academy Award for Best Screenplay; Beau Sabreur (1928), which starred Gary Cooper, a sequel to the 1927 version … [Read more...] about Gretchen the Greenhorn

Filed Under: Essay

January 14, 2020 By kathy

Greed

"In an era devoted to escapism and the happy ending," writes film historian Kevin Brownlow, "Stroheim's obsession with realism must have seemed insane." The director abandoned the studio to shoot on the actual locations evoked in Frank Norris's novel McTeague, so that Greed, among many other things, … [Read more...] about Greed

Filed Under: Essay

January 14, 2020 By kathy

The Great White Silence

When rescuers found the frozen bodies of three members of the 1910–1914 British Antarctic Expedition camped eleven miles from the nearest food depot, it had been almost a year since the explorers had died. Outside the tent, all that remained of the sledge they had man-hauled for the 850-mile journey … [Read more...] about The Great White Silence

Filed Under: Essay

January 14, 2020 By kathy

The Great Cast Contest of 1915

"An Opportunity to Vote for All Your Favorites and Do Them All Justice" With that announcement, the editors of Motion Picture magazine launched a new popularity contest for actors. They asked readers to vote for the best performers in twelve categories, creating a dream cast of the best stars. The … [Read more...] about The Great Cast Contest of 1915

Filed Under: Feature

January 14, 2020 By kathy

The Goose Woman

It could have been a lurid, “ripped from the headlines” melodrama from a studio known for its cheap genre films. Instead, The Goose Woman (1925) became one of Universal’s “Jewels,” a prestige production with a better than average script, an excellent cast and production values, and an up-and-coming … [Read more...] about The Goose Woman

Filed Under: Essay

January 14, 2020 By kathy

Goona Goona: An Authentic Melodrama of the Isle of Bali

However neglected, perhaps correctly, the history of independent exploitation films is as long as any other varietal of film—the nudie, the sensational barnstormer, the adults-only “if you dare” faux-exposé have always been with us. How we might approach this kind of film, beyond any sort of … [Read more...] about Goona Goona: An Authentic Melodrama of the Isle of Bali

Filed Under: Essay

January 14, 2020 By kathy

Good References

Good References, a 1920 “lost” film recently discovered in a Prague archive and restored by UCLA, is a classic example of the type of movie the silent film business learned was a sure-fire way to make money. Directed by R. William Neill, with a scenario by Dorothy Farnum from an E.J. Rath novel, … [Read more...] about Good References

Filed Under: Essay

January 14, 2020 By kathy

The Good Bad Man

Made early in Douglas Fairbanks’s film career, The Good Bad Man is the fifth of his 12 feature-length films made for the Fine Arts division of the Triangle Film Corporation, and the second of ten collaborations between Fairbanks and director Allan Dwan. It is also among his earliest films to explore … [Read more...] about The Good Bad Man

Filed Under: Essay

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