756 stories
·
2 followers

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman (1928, Victor Sjostrom)

1 Share

Greta Garbo Victor Sjostrom

Tags:

Read the whole story
victorseastrom
3 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Swedish Silent Film

1 Share

Swedish Silent Film

Tags:

Read the whole story
victorseastrom
3 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord on Silent Film Hollywood, Lost Silent Film, Swedish Silent Film, Danish Silent Film: Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)

1 Share

Greta Garbo

Tags:

Read the whole story
victorseastrom
3 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Swedish Silent Film: Gyurkoricsarna (John Brunius, 1920)

1 Share
Silent Film Scott Lord swedish silent film
Read the whole story
victorseastrom
11 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Temptress (Fred Niblo)

3 Shares
From: ScottLordnovelist
Duration: 1:45:19
Views: 47

Read the whole story
scottlordpoet2
11 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
11 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
11 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete

Scott Lord: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman (1928, Victor Sjostrom)

3 Shares

"The Divine Woman" directed in the United States during 1928 featured three Swedish Silent Film stars from the Golden Age of Swedish Silent film, two of whom, Victor Sjostrom and Lars Hanson, would soon return to Sweden to mark the advent of sound film. Sjostrom would return to act and only act, in front of the camera rather than behind it. Only one reel of the film survives, it being presumed lost with no other footage of the film surviving other than the fragment.
Bo Florin, Stockholm University, in his volume Transition and Transformation- Victor Sjostrom in Hollywood 1923-1930, looks as a film detective not only to film critics and magazine articles printed during the first run of the film, as I have, this webpage in fact subtitled "Lost Films, Found Magazines", (please excuse the trendy contemporary use of subtitles during peer review) but also to the the cutting continuity script, his finding a specific sequence where Sjostrom uses "a combination between iris and dissolve", one which, as an iris down, fulfills the "classic Sjostrom function of an analogy". There are two other dissolves in the same sequence that are used as transitions, spatial transitions, yet both are taken from different camera distances. Again, no footage from r the scene or the reel it is from survives. One can ask if double exposures were only infrquently published in magazines or advertisements as publicity stills, or even as lobby cards or posters and if modern audiences have ever seen photographs from the scene.
Victor Sjostrom and Greta Garbo
Read the whole story
scottlordpoet2
11 days ago
reply
scottlordpoet
11 days ago
reply
victorseastrom
11 days ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories