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John Gilbert, Greta Garbo in Flesh in the Devil by Clarence Brown

Film historian Kevin Brownlow in the Sunday Times:

"This year is the 80th anniversary of The Jazz Singer, the film that brought the silent era to an end. The talkie revolution undoubtedly enriched the cinema, but it ended something magnificent. The silent film was a universal language. Change the titles, and your film could be seen from Alaska to Zanzibar. The new art began with simple scenes of workers leaving a factory and graduated to multi-screen epics lasting hours. The fixed camera was soon on the move — lashed to the front of a train, swooping on a trapeze, plunging over a cliff, the editing dazzling the audience with single-frame cuts. Vast picture palaces were built, equipped with symphony orchestras and seating thousands. In New York, the streets around Times Square had to be closed to traffic every evening because the movie-going crowds were so massive. They were not flocking to see the jerky, flickering image of comic legend; silent films at their best were technically superb and aesthetically astonishing. Their stars, Gloria Swanson, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford, were the best-loved people in the world. The movies surpassed even the press as the most powerful medium. And this was achieved, incredibly, in a little over 30 years. Have we come as far since 1972?"

In the article, Brownlow also lists 10 "essential silents":

The Birth of a Nation, 1915 The most influential and controversial of all silents

Broken Blossoms, 1919 Poetry on the screen

The Phantom of the Opera, 1925 Inspired hokum

Varieté / Variety, 1926 Dazzling sex drama set among trapeze artists

George O'Brien, Janet Gaynor in Sunrise by F. W. MurnauFlesh and the Devil [top], 1927 [Greta] Garbo and [John] Gilbert fell in love on this picture – and it shows

Metropolis, 1927 The silliest great film yet made

Napoléon, 1927 The most technically innovative film yet made

Sunrise [right], 1927 Masterly use of the camera

The Crowd, 1928 A young couple’s fight against poverty

The Wind, 1928 Lillian Gish enduring relentless Texan storms

More essential silents

 

Ariel Awards - 2007 Winners

SHOOTER (2007) by Antoine Fuqua: Film Review

STAR WARS Kicks off the Academy’s Great To Be Nominated Series Part III

SUFFERING AND SMILING (2006) by Dan Ollman: Film Review

Albert Maysles Evening in Hollywood

 

 

One Response to “Kevin Brownlow’s Essential Silents”

  1. on 25 Mar 2008 at 12:58 pm Sigmund

    What about Nosferatu???????

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