LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare films

Post news stories and home video release announcements here.
  • Author
  • Message
Online
User avatar

silentfilm

Moderator

  • Posts: 6794
  • Joined: Tue Dec 18, 2007 12:31 pm
  • Location: Dallas, TX USA

LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare films

PostMon Aug 29, 2011 5:30 pm

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/ne ... 5186.story
Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare films

Annual festival will screen silents and pre-code talkies.

By Susan King, Los Angeles Times
August 29, 2011The organizers of the annual Cinecon film festival in Los Angeles have a simple mantra.

"We have a saying among ourselves that if it's rare we'll show it," said film and TV archivist-historian Stan Taffel, the festival's vice president.

That's not to say every film featured at the five-day festival, which features silent movies and early talkies, is a gem — to be honest, a few could even be described as turkeys. But that's not the point. "Because these films are so rare, no one has seen them," Taffel noted. "We are making these films available to be seen so they can be appreciated on their own merits."

Cinecon 47 opens Thursday at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood and continues through Sept. 5. Besides screening nearly 30 films, Cinecon also features memorabilia and collectibles show at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel. The Sunday evening banquet at the hotel will honor veteran performers Julie Adams ("The Creature From the Black Lagoon"), Jimmy Lyndon ("Life With Father") and Fay McKenzie ("Down Mexico Way"). Cinecon is also honoring the work of the National Film Preservation Foundation, which funds the major U.S. archives' film preservation efforts and played a key role the past two years in repatriating silent U.S. films in the New Zealand Film Archive.

A majority of the films in this year's festival were funded or partly funded by the National Film Preservation Foundation. "Every year we preserve over 100 films from the archival community across America through our grants," explained NFPF chief Annette Melville. "Many of them find a local audience, but it's not often they can be shown to a national group of film fans, and Cinecon is just a perfect showcase."

When programming Cinecon, Taffel and Cinecon president Robert Birchard try to stick to the era before the production code was enforced in 1934, when Hollywood clamped down on the sexual content and violence that were allowed in early talkies. Cinecon also has strong connections with the studios and national film archives such as UCLA Film & Television Archive, the Academy Archive and the George Eastman House.

"But we do go past the code when it is something really rare and something the studios are letting us know they have been working on," Taffel said.

One such film is the 1944 Fred MacMurray and Claudette Colbert comedy, "Practically Yours." "We ran a few other pictures of Claudette Colbert and Fred MacMurray and they were such big hits, when we found out that 'Practically Yours' was available, our friends at Universal made a print for us," Taffel said.

Taffel is especially excited about the episodes from silent serials screening at the festival, including an episode from 1914's "The Active Life of Dolly of the Dailies," which was found last year in New Zealand and has been restored by the Academy Archive.

""The episode we are running is No. 63. It ran for a total of 119 episodes," Taffel said. "This serial went on for a couple of years and audiences were riveted, so to run a full episode is very exciting to me."

Cinecon audiences have been clamoring for films starring Jack Haley — best known as the Tin Man in "The Wizard of Oz" — so the festival is showing 1937's "She Had to Eat," an offbeat comedy road picture, which also features Rochelle Hudson and Arthur Treacher.

Taffel said he expects to "hoot and howl" at 1920's "Stronger Than Death," preserved by the George Eastman House from funding by NFPF. The film stars Russian actress Alla Nazimova, whose acting style was less than subtle. Metro Pictures proclaimed in their ads that the film showed "The Peerless Star in a Drama of Tremendous Strength."

"A lot of Nazimova fans will be showing up at Cinecon to see the film," said Taffel, who loves the plot of "Stronger Than Death."

"It's about a woman with a heart condition who is a dancer and told never to dance again, but when something happens she is forced to dance. Nazimova was a maverick. She was brazen. She was gutsy."

For more information and the schedule go to www.cinecon.org.

susan.king(at)latimes.com
Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times
Online
User avatar

silentfilm

Moderator

  • Posts: 6794
  • Joined: Tue Dec 18, 2007 12:31 pm
  • Location: Dallas, TX USA

Re: LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare film

PostSun Sep 04, 2011 9:55 pm

http://ladailymirror.com/2011/09/03/mary-mallory-hollywood-heights-cinecon/

Mary Mallory: Hollywood Heights — Cinecon
Posted on September 3, 2011 by lmharnisch

For those who love classic movies, Cinecon Film Festival is the place to be. Held over the Labor Day weekend at the Egyptian Theatre, in Hollywood, California, the 47-year-old festival features rare silents and talkies, along with appearances by stars and the selling of movie memorabilia. So far, the festival has featured some really entertaining and fun titles, with appearances by some of our movie mystery photo contestants!

Thursday night opened with the screening of HOLLYWOOD STORY (Universal, 1951), a sort of film noir that tells the story of a producer attempting to resolve the unsolved mystery of who killed a movie star director on a film lot, much like the William Desmond Taylor case. The movie employs real Hollywood locations, like the Henson (Chaplin) Studios on La Brea, Roosevelt Hotel, Grauman’s Chinese, the Hollywood Christmas Parade, Hollywood and Vine, Universal Studios, La Rue’s on the Strip, and Jack’s on the Beach in Santa Monica. Silent stars like Francis X. Bushman, Helen Gibson, and William Farnum make cameos, though nine others were cut from the film. The evening also included the 1927 William Wyler western BLAZING DAYS and the Three Stooges IN THE SWEET PIE AND PIE. The evening concluded with SHE HAD TO EAT (Fox, 1937), which featured Franklin Pangborn as the unctuous luxury car salesman, Mr. Phoecian-Wylie. Eugene Pallette, Arthur Treacher, Jack Haley, and Rochelle Hudson also star.

Hands Up!
Photo: “Hands Up!” was the hit of the evening.
Friday saw a full day of eclectic films from 9 A.M. to midnight. That morning, the only surviving chapter of the Mary Fuller serial DOLLY OF THE DAILIES (1914) played, as did an over the top with everything but the kitchen sink Alla Nazimova film STRONGER THAN DEATH (Metro, 1920). A chapter of the Helen Gibson railroad serial OPEN TRACK (1916) ran after lunch, followed by the William S. Hart ON THE NIGHT STAGE (1915), and later the 2003 documentary CINERAMA ADVENTURE played. That evening featured the toe-tapping short GUS VAN’S MUSICAL SHOPPE (Universal, 1935), with some hilarious songs and body movements, followed by the pleasing COLLEGE RHYTHM (Paramount, 1934), wonderfully choreographed by LeRoy Prinz, along with nice camerawork and fun songs and featuring Mr. Pangborn again.

The hit of the evening was the hilarious Raymond Griffith film HANDS UP (Paramount, 1926), a Civil War tale with Mormonism and multiple wives thrown in. The evening concluded with THE NIGHT MAYOR (Columbia, 1932), based on New York’s Mayor Jimmy Walker, but filmed around Hollywood Boulevard.
Offline
User avatar

Brooksie

  • Posts: 1315
  • Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2010 6:41 pm
  • Location: Portland, Oregon via Sydney, Australia

Re: LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare film

PostMon Sep 05, 2011 8:02 pm

Looking forward to reports! :D
Offline
User avatar

telical

  • Posts: 455
  • Joined: Fri Jun 24, 2011 10:46 pm

Re: LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare film

PostMon Sep 05, 2011 9:35 pm

silentfilm wrote:http://ladailymirror.com/2011/09/03/mary-mallory-hollywood-heights-cinecon/

The hit of the evening was the hilarious Raymond Griffith film HANDS UP (Paramount, 1926), a Civil War tale with Mormonism and multiple wives thrown in.


It's on YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNZRSccynKA

--
Robert Pearson
ParaMind Brainstorming Software http://www.paramind.net
Telical Books http://www.telicalbooks.com
Online
User avatar

silentfilm

Moderator

  • Posts: 6794
  • Joined: Tue Dec 18, 2007 12:31 pm
  • Location: Dallas, TX USA

Re: LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare film

PostMon Sep 05, 2011 9:55 pm

I have some stills from Hands Up! as well as an advertising herald here. It is available in several bootleg video versions, since it is still under copyright and Paramount is not interested in releasing their silent films. I'm sure that it was a riot on a big screen with a great accompanist.
Offline
User avatar

missdupont

  • Posts: 1514
  • Joined: Mon Sep 07, 2009 9:48 pm
  • Location: California

Re: LA Times: Classic Hollywood: Cinecon showcases rare film

PostWed Sep 07, 2011 8:25 am

Here's the second half of my Cinecon review:

http://ladailymirror.com/2011/09/06/mar ... on-part-2/

Return to Silent News

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Wm. Charles Morrow and 1 guest