Obviously the most talked-about home video release here at the moment is Chicago, but before I knew it was going to come out on DVD, I used it in the masthead back in
May of '09. So I figured maybe the way to note it a second time was by saluting its auteur and, indeed, one of the towering figures of cinema, Cecil B. DeMille. DeMille, like Capra or Hitchcock, has remained a brand name even into the amnesiac present (hey, who else of his time could get his name
partway into a movie title today?) but his reputation had hardened by the 60s or 70s, or maybe even during his life, into "schlockmeister of epic Biblical hokum." It's the effort that has been put into restoring our view of the DeMille of the silent era-- including by folks here, such as David Shepard, who has released so much of his work, and Bob Birchard with his excellent book-- that has restored a fuller view of him as one of the savviest, and certainly the canniest commercially, observer/exploiter of American life and mores in the teens and 20s. The DeMille of The Cheat, The Whispering Chorus, The Affairs of Anatol, Why Change Your Wife?, The Golden Bed, Chicago, The Godless Girl and many other films is a much more interesting and rounded personality than the box office tycoon and plummy-voiced plutocrat of Samson and Delilah and The Ten Commandments-- and I say that as someone who loves The Ten Commandments unreservedly. Another DeMille book, a biography by Scott Eyman, is coming later this year, and promises to be another great treat and to broaden our view of him further.
So anyway, ready when you are C.B., have a month to yourself. That is, incidentally, the great cinematographer Karl Struss in the middle; I don't know who the guy running the camera for the European negative is, nor do I know what picture it's from (it could be anything from Something to Think About to Four Frightened People).