I have been collecting silent films on DVD for over 20 years and it’s very gratifying to see more titles from 1910-1920 become available on the home market. Case in point is this satisfying 1916 double bill from Kino Lorber starring Douglas Fairbanks 4 years before his breakthrough film, THE MARK OF ZORRO. I had known about THE HALF BREED for years thanks to a famous still of Doug in the briefest of loincloths. It was considered a lost film and I never expected to see it. The rediscovery of old movies and the restoration of them has come a long way since the turn of the century with THE HALF BREED and THE GOOD BAD MAN being 2 excellent examples. Both are collaborative efforts between The San Francisco Silent Film Festival, La Cinematique Francaise, and Lobster Films. The quality of the movie image is excellent and the musical scores by Donald Sosin are simple and effective.
THE HALF BREED tells the story of Lo Dorman whose Native American mother was abandoned by his white father resulting in her death. He then faces extreme ostracism from the townspeople of the small community he lives in. THE GOOD BAD MAN has him playing a Robin Hood like bandit named “Passing Through” who steals only what is needed and then gives it to those who need it most. Both films benefit from the presence of Sam De Grasse, Fairbanks’ go to villain, who is nothing less than a silent film version of Alan Rickman. Both of these movies were helmed by Allan Dwan (1885-1981), a Canadian born director whose career spanned over 50 years and featured such titles as 2 Shirley Temple vehicles (HEIDI, REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM) and the John Wayne classic, THE SANDS OF IWO JIMA. His silent films are now making a comeback with the recent release of 3 Gloria Swanson films (ZAZA, MANHANDLED, STAGE STRUCK).
Kino Lorber has recently released a number of Paramount silents including 2 classic W.C. Fields comedies (IT’S THE OLD ARMY GAME, RUNNING WILD) and the epic Western THE COVERED WAGON. Two more titles on the horizon include a newly restored version of Josef von Sternberg’s THE LAST COMMAND with Emil Jannings and the one I’ve been waiting on, OLD IRONSIDES with Charles Farrell & Esther Ralston. That just leaves THE DOCKS OF NEW YORK, Valentino’s THE SHEIK, and Erich von Stroheim’s THE WEDDING MARCH from the old VHS set of almost 30 years ago to be released on DVD/Blu-Ray. The 1923 THE TEN COMMANDMENTS and WINGS from that set have already been given deluxe editions