• 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 10, 2020 By kathy

The First Born

A sexually provocative melodrama of upper-class decadence with surprisingly sophisticated stylistic flourishes, The First Born is the collaboration of two key players in the British film industry of the 1920s and ’30s whose work has largely fallen into obscurity, Miles Mander and Alma … [Read more...] about The First Born

Filed Under: Essay

January 10, 2020 By kathy

Filibus

“No other crime thriller compares to Filibus!” trumpeted a double-page ad in the April 1915 edition of Italian film magazine La Vita Cinematografica. For once, studio PR was no exaggeration. Filibus, which follows the exploits of a futuristic female super-villain who pounces on her prey from a … [Read more...] about Filibus

Filed Under: Essay

January 10, 2020 By kathy

Faust

Friedrich Wilhelm Plumpe, known forever to gods and mortals as F.W. Murnau, is a towering figure in cinema’s pantheon. Unfortunately, Nosferatu (1922), The Last Laugh (1924), and Sunrise (1927)—the masterpiece he made upon his arrival in Hollywood—have come to overshadow the rest of the director’s … [Read more...] about Faust

Filed Under: Essay

January 10, 2020 By kathy

The Farmer’s Wife

A widowed landowner decides to marry again. With the aid of his faithful housekeeper he draws up a list of all the eligible women in the neighborhood, and goes wooing each in turn, with disastrous results. A romantic comedy in a rural setting is about as far as you can get from a typical … [Read more...] about The Farmer’s Wife

Filed Under: Essay

January 10, 2020 By kathy

Fantasia of Color in Early Cinema

“Old black-and-white movies” is a phrase that trips easily off the tongue but, like many common beliefs about silent cinema, it is inaccurate. Color has accompanied motion pictures since the beginning with some of the earliest public screenings featuring hand-colored films in their programs. Because … [Read more...] about Fantasia of Color in Early Cinema

Filed Under: Essay

January 10, 2020 By kathy

The Fall of the House of Usher

One evening in the mid-1930s Henri Langlois took Georges Franju to Montmartre’s Studio 28, where a few years earlier the first Surrealist films had played to riotous crowds. The program included screenings of Jean Epstein’s La Chute de la maison Usher (The Fall of the House of Usher) and Buñuel and … [Read more...] about The Fall of the House of Usher

Filed Under: Essay

January 10, 2020 By kathy

Faces in the Dark

Founders Melissa Chittick and Stephen Salmons Look Back at the Early Days of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival It takes more than a passion for silent film to put on a festival. Melissa Chittick had a film degree from UC-Santa Barbara, and Stephen Salmons had been making Super-8 silent films … [Read more...] about Faces in the Dark

Filed Under: Interview

January 10, 2020 By kathy

The Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in the Land of the Bolsheviks

It’s 1924 and the kindly, well-meaning Mr. West, a director of the YMCA, decides to undertake an international mission to civilize the Bolsheviks whom he has been told are a pack of wild savages who dress up in animal skins and arm themselves with hammers and sickles. For protection, he brings along … [Read more...] about The Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in the Land of the Bolsheviks

Filed Under: Essay

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 44
  • Go to page 45
  • Go to page 46
  • Go to page 47
  • Go to page 48
  • 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