Giuseppe Giusti (director)
Giacomo Angelini (cinematographer)
Fabienne Fabrèges (lead/writer)
Valeria Creti (lead)
Attilio De Virgiliis (lead)
Bonaventura Ibáñez (lead)
Didaco Chellini (lead)
Corona (production)
No, this work is neither insightful nor masterful: the plot has big holes, the star's efforts at seductiveness are tepid at best (go learn from a diva's virtuoso performance), and the finale drags on too long. But there's enough sadistic pleasure and pussy-whipped masochism, phony protests of “I'm-not-that-kind-of-girl”, self-pity and despair, duplicity, double-crossing, debauchery, winks to the audience, and stylish visuals to satisfy the primal urge for sleazy fun.
Benjamin Christensen (director/lead/writer)
Johan Ankerstjerne (cinematographer)
Intertitle: "...A new clue...those words had an ominous sound to Mr. Wilken". Then, about 15 seconds later, the next intertitle: "...A new clue...those words seem to burn". And it painfully drags on like this, every scene taking twice the time needed (when half the scenes were not needed at all) in this 100-minute remake of the 6-minute "Physician Of The Castle" (1908), that simply adds 94 minutes of bloated backstory.
Louis Feuillade (director/writer)
Arthur Bernède (writer)
André Glatti (cinematographer)
Léon Klausse (cinematographer)
Édouard Mathé (lead)
Jean Devalde (lead)
Louis Leubas (lead)
Marcel Lévesque (lead)
Musidora (lead)
René Cresté (lead)
Yvette Andréyor (lead)
Gaumont (production)
A caped crusader and his sidekick respond to a distress signal that appears at their tech-equipped cave. Welcome to the cinema of 1917 - where the story began...
William S. Hart (director/lead)
Joseph H. August (cinematographer)
Lambert Hillyer (writer)
Margery Wilson (lead)
Yes, once again Hart plays a cowboy who is changed when he falls for a woman. But, from that point, this story rides off on a different trail. For starters, he's the big boss instead of an outlaw - a meanspirited bully. And, even though the cowboy sees only goodness in the woman, viewers may wonder what is really behind her amused looks and questionable judgment. In short, this stretches away from the predictable film fables, offering more of the depth and ambiguity encountered in everyday life.
Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle (director/lead/writer)
George Peters (cinematographer)
Al St. John (lead)
Buster Keaton (lead)
Luke the Dog (lead)
Comique (production)
The boys get a taste of their own philandering medicine when they all flip over a hardcore player (Buster flips backward). The result, of course, is endless slapstick battles - and the first time the kid in the crew gets the gal.
Pyotr Chardynin (director/lead)
Vladimir Siversen (cinematographer)
Vera Kholodnaya (lead)
Vitold Polonsky (lead)
Olga Rakhmanova (lead)
Kharitonov (production)
Apparently, an attempt to address class conflict in the standard weepy melodramatic format (complete with violin). While the fragments that remain do not provide a convincing critique (compare with Child of the Big City (1914)), it's still more substantial than other surviving works by this director.
Tod Browning (director)
Harvey Gates (writer)
Waldemar Young (writer)
Evelyn Campbell (author)
Priscilla Dean (lead)
Lon Chaney (lead)
Wellington A. Playter (lead)
Spottiswoode Aitken (lead)
Kalla Pasha (lead)
Talent of Priscilla Dean wasted in this cornball Bad-Girl-Gone-Good tale of 1-dimensional characters more suited to early Griffith fluff.
Fritz Lang (director/writer)
Karl Freund (cinematographer)
Carl de Vogt (lead)
Georg John (lead)
Lil Dagover (lead)
Ressel Orla (lead)
Erich Pommer (producer)
While in hot pursuit of conspicuous leisure, a delusional elite spots a bottle trashed in the sea. For no apparent reason, he takes it home and struggles to get to the urgent message he has convinced himself is inside (not wanting to simply break the valuable trashy bottle). He claims the bottle contained an urgent message (although its pedantry seems quite incongruent with the circumstances under which it was purportedly written). The message tells of “unbelievable treasures” and a gold mine “which appears to be inexhaustible” (claims that modern viewers will be familiar with from their encounters with the bottle's cyber-twin: scam spam). When he spins this tale to his fellow elites at Club Inbreeders, it gets picked up by an agent of a diabolical gullible mastermind, and leads to an intensely silly spectacle of competing blundering murderous international thieves - with one posing as White Savior - that modern viewers will be familiar with from their encounters with its political-twin: the new “Cold War”.
Max Linder (director/lead/writer)
Alta Allen (lead)
F.B. Crayne (lead)
Max Linder Productions (production)
Max breaks a mirror, then tries to avoid bad luck, but makes things worse. First of Linder's three full-length feature films made in USA.
Guido Brignone (director)
Ubaldo Arata (cinematographer)
Massimo Terzano (cinematographer)
Segundo de Chomón (cinematographer)
Riccardo Artuffo (writer)
Stefano Pittaluga (writer)
Dante Alighieri (author)
Bartolomeo Pagano (lead)
Elena Sangro (lead)
Itala (production)
A surprisingly imaginative visual feast, not so far from Fellini.
C. Y. Lee/李澤源 (director)
Hou Yao/侯曜 (writer)
Guy de Maupassant (author)
P. L. Chan/程沛霖 (cinematographer)
Harding Louie/雷夏電 (lead)
H. June Liu/劉漢鈞 (lead)
Liu Ji-Qun/劉繼群 (lead)
E. E. Dick/翟綺綺 (lead)
Great Wall Film/上海長城畫片 (production)
A rather lifeless morality tale adapted from the 1888 short story “The Necklace” by Guy de Maupassant, warning of the perils of vanity, that is brightened only by its lavish set designs.
Sun Yu/孫瑜 (director/writer)
Zhou Ke/周克 (cinematographer)
Li Lili/黎莉莉 (lead)
Gao Zhan-Fei/高占非 (lead)
Liu Ji-Qun/劉繼群 (lead)
Han Lan-Gen/韓蘭根 (lead)
Lianhua (production)
Story of Ling-Ling, a hick hottie in Shanghai who discovers she's a magnet for lechers when she is raped by her boss, and then (a few hours later) by his goon, and then (a few hours later) tricked into following a devious old man who sells her to a brothel - all this in a single night, before daybreak. Finally, she learns to utilize her God-given talent to uplift the economy and the general condition of the human race - who then rape her one last time - and also learns to make lots of flag-waving speeches along the way. Filmed shortly after Japanese bombing of Shanghai, which may account for its over-the-top vibe.
Robert S. Baker (cinematographer/director)
Monty Berman (cinematographer/director)
Jimmy Sangster (author/writer)
Alexander Baron (writer)
Donald Sinden (lead)
Nicole Berger (lead)
Kieron Moore (lead)
Peter Wyngarde (lead)
Godfrey Quigley (lead)
Tutte Lemkow (lead)
George Pastell (lead)
The fascinating true story of a couple of anarchists in 1911 London that fought off the combined force of police and military is trampled by this monstrous mishmash of movie cliches, replacing it with "Siege of Sidney Street: The Musical" - an outrageously unbelievable tale of near total fiction, that's an excruciating bore to boot. For a better fictionalized Sidney Street Siege, check out the shootout in the final scene of Hitchcock's 1934 "The Man Who Knew Too Much"
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