In conjunction with its release of THE OUTLAW AND HIS WIFE, Kino has also given us this splendid double bill from Victor Sjostrom (Seastrom in America) who was truly one of the world’s great directors. His influence on other Scandinavian filmmakers (Ingmar Bergman and Carl Theodor Dreyer to name two of the best known) isContinue reading “INGEBORG HOLM / A MAN THERE WAS: Remarkable Silent Double Feature From Victor Sjostrom (Seastrom)”
Category Archives: Uncategorized
THE OUTLAW & HIS WIFE (1918): Victor Sjostrom’s Classic Saga Finally on DVD
It has taken Kino several years to make THE OUTLAW AND HIS WIFE available on DVD (the VHS version first appeared in 1989) but it has been worth the wait. Although it is essentially the same source material (the Swedish Film Institute’s 1986 restoration) as the video, the picture is marginally sharper in detail andContinue reading “THE OUTLAW & HIS WIFE (1918): Victor Sjostrom’s Classic Saga Finally on DVD”
THE SAGA OF GOSTA BERLING: Sweden’s Great Silent Epic As It Was Meant To Be Seen
THE SAGA OF GOSTA BERLING has been available for many years but never like this. Previous versions were cut-rate low budget affairs that were missing over half the film’s running time and were often presented without any kind of musical accompaniment. European silent films in particular have suffered in the U.S. where, because of theContinue reading “THE SAGA OF GOSTA BERLING: Sweden’s Great Silent Epic As It Was Meant To Be Seen”
SIR ARNE’S TREASURE (1919): Ghostly Revenge In Olde Sweden
SIR ARNE’S TREASURE is one of three releases from Kino devoted to Swedish silent cinema and in particular the work of Mauritz Stiller. Stiller is remembered today, when he is remembered at all, as the man who brought Greta Garbo to America. Garbo, of course, went on to screen immortality while Stiller simply went onContinue reading “SIR ARNE’S TREASURE (1919): Ghostly Revenge In Olde Sweden”
FRANKENSTEIN UNBOUND (1990): Roger Corman’s Swan Song Shows That Less Is More
Having just sat through my umpteenth 100 million dollar plus CGI extravaganza which shall remain anonymous although it is interchangeable with any number of big budget films made since the turn of the century), I find myself gravitating more and more to the low budget films of yore where special effects were subservient to character,Continue reading “FRANKENSTEIN UNBOUND (1990): Roger Corman’s Swan Song Shows That Less Is More”
DEMENTIA 13 (1963): Best Looking Version That I Have Ever Seen
I first saw DEMENTIA 13 on late night TV back in the mid 1960s and the shadowy lighting, stark b&w photography, dissonant score, and brutal axe murders made quite an impression on me. It would be years before I would see the film again. I rented it from a Mom and Pop video store backContinue reading “DEMENTIA 13 (1963): Best Looking Version That I Have Ever Seen”
THE INTRUDER (1961): Roger Corman’s Notorious Money Loser
THE INTRUDER is best known today as one of the few Roger Corman films to have lost money. Because of that fact and its subject material, racial hatred in the newly desegregated South, it has rarely been seen. This film was shot in 1961 when there was no Civil Rights Act and the film versionContinue reading “THE INTRUDER (1961): Roger Corman’s Notorious Money Loser”
JAMAICA INN (1939): Hitchcock’s Last British Movie In A Stunning Restoration
If anyone other than Alfred Hitchcock had directed JAMAICA INN, it would be considered a minor masterpiece especially considering when and where it was made. This tale of 19th century smugglers and wreckers off the coast of Cornwall is on par with anything Hollywood did in the pirate genre. The movie’s merits are clearly evidentContinue reading “JAMAICA INN (1939): Hitchcock’s Last British Movie In A Stunning Restoration”
FRITZ LANG’S INDIAN EPIC (1959) : A Remake That Holds Its Own
Done with Hollywood by the mid 1950s, Fritz Lang returned to Germany and decided to remake THE INDIAN TOMB (reviewed elsewhere), a legendary German silent film from 1921 that he had originally been scheduled to direct (he was one of the film’s writers). Just as in the case of the first film, the remake wasContinue reading “FRITZ LANG’S INDIAN EPIC (1959) : A Remake That Holds Its Own”
THE INDIAN TOMB (1921): Indian Mysticism Meets German Exoticism
As the second decade of the 21st century nears its end, I have been going back in recent months to revisit some of my earliest silent film DVDs. One of my early favorites was Joe May’s (pronounced MY) THE INDIAN TOMB from 1921 (now 100 years old) and I am happy to report that afterContinue reading “THE INDIAN TOMB (1921): Indian Mysticism Meets German Exoticism”