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Scott Lord Silent Film: Lillian Gish in The Scarlet Letter (Victor Seastrom, 1926)

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Silent Film

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victorseastrom
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Garbo-Seastrom Blog: Silent Film Archive

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The blog garbo-seastrom.blogspot.com, titled "Swedish Silent Film: Victor Sjostrom, Victor Seastrom, Greta Garbo, Mauritz Stiller, Lon Chaney," is a specialized historical and film-theory site maintained by Scott Lord.

The site serves as a deep-dive archive into the Golden Age of Swedish Silent Film and its intersection with Hollywood. Key themes and features of the blog include:

  • Iconography & Film Theory: Many posts analyze Greta Garbo as a "figurehead of modernity" and an Art Deco icon. The author often applies academic frameworks (like "archival poetics") to analyze mise-en-scène and fashion in films like The Torrent (1926) and A Woman of Affairs (1929).

  • Focus on Victor Sjöström: The blog extensively documents the career of Victor Sjöström (known in Hollywood as Victor Seastrom), covering his Swedish roots (e.g., The Gardener) and his American masterpieces like The Wind and The Scarlet Letter.

  • Research into "Lost" Films: A recurring theme is "Lost Films in Found Magazines," where the author uses vintage photoplay magazines, sketches, and reviews to reconstruct or provide context for silent films that have since been lost or damaged.

  • Historical Context: It tracks the transition of major Swedish figures—Garbo, Sjöström, Lars Hanson, and Mauritz Stiller—from Stockholm to the American studio system, and how their departure affected the Swedish film industry.

  • Bibliographic Resources: The blog frequently cites primary sources from the 1920s, such as Motion Picture Magazine, Exhibitor's Herald, and various fashion articles (like "What the Garbo Girl should Wear").

The site is updated frequently with detailed posts on specific silent-era films, providing both historical facts and scholarly analysis of the silent film as a "deepening of the novel as an art form."

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scottlordpoet2
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victorseastrom
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Scott Lord Silent Sherlock Holmes: Sherlock Holmes Baffled (Marvin, 1900)

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Author Ron Haydock, in his volume Deerstalker: Holmes and Watson on screen, is succinct in describing the first appearance of Arthur Conon Doyle's Sherlock Holmes on screen, "Directed by Arthur Marvin, Edison's Sherlock Holmes film was shot with only one set, and one strait-on full shot cameraangle and can be viewed time and again without boredom. It's fast, entertaining and over before you would like it to be."
Sherlock Holmes in Elsinore, Mystery in Danish Silent Film
Silent Film Sherlock Holmes: Sherlock Holmes i Bondefangelor
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victorseastrom
6 days ago
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scottlordpoet2
155 days ago
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Scott Lord on Silent Film - YouTube

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Silent Fil

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victorseastrom
6 days ago
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Silent Film: Greta Garbo in The Torrent (Monta Bell, 1926)

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Greta Garbo

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victorseastrom
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Scott Lord Silent Film: Lady Godiva 1911

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Silent Film

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victorseastrom
9 days ago
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scottlordpoet2
12 days ago
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