Derek B. wrote:The Stanford Theatre's Winter 2012 program is now up
here and includes a number of silents (all accompanied by Dennis James).
March 9 at the California Theatre in San Jose:
Faust
FAUST was presented last night as part of the 2 week long San Jose Cinequest film festival, at the 1,100 seat gloriously restored 1927 California Theatre. I arrived 30 minutes beforehand to find a long lineup of several hundred people, gobs more than any other silent screened at this festival in past years. Although a gathering of Opera SJ supporters were present, my hunch for the huge turnout could be attributed to the recent success of THE ARTIST, as from overhearing talk in line, many of the young, hip festival goers seemed excited to be experiencing a silent film viewing as a new experience.
This was my first time seeing FAUST on the big screen, only having once seen an old VHS copy years ago. The print seemed good, however it had German intertitles, with English translation superimposed on the bottom, making it hard to read. The 90% capacity crowd only tittered a bit at the florid dialogue (and Gosta Ekmans’ heavily lipsticked visage) and were clearly captivated by Emil Jannings’ antics as Mephisto. Although the film can drag a bit during the 2nd half with the ostracizing of poor Gretchen, I did not witness any walk-outs, unlike prior silent screenings at this festival.
The musical accompaniment was provided by Filmharmonica Duo; Dennis James at the Wurlitzer and Theremin, and Mark Goldstein manning the Buchla Lightning Wands (?!). Dennis enthusiastically raved about the Wurlitzer installed in this theatre, then gave a short demo of the Theremin, and had Mark demo the “wands” which seemed to be the latest in programmable synthesizers. I wasn’t sure how I was going to like the electronics, but the score was a mélange of Gounod’s melodies, Bach’s Passacaglia in C minor, and wonderfully eerie SciFi effects. I loved it, as did the crowd who gave the duo wild applause and a well deserved standing ovation at the close of the film.