gscottrobinson wrote:Hi! For those of you that are interested, I have actually found one intertitle:
A 1926 card from the film The Caveman. They've got it at the
Margaret Herrick Library in California and I'm going to arrange a visit.
I never thought it would be this hard!
If I had the ability to chase down Penfold's lead at the BFI I probably would.
Also, I found a dissertation on the Pacific Titling company, which apparently did work on silent films as well. At this point, they are closed to visitors, but I'm going to do a bit of digging.
I don't suppose anyone knows anything about early Hollywood titling companies?
Thanks,
Gregory
I'm pretty sure Bob Birchard has a few original title cards in his collection. You might bring up the alt.movies.silent newsgroup in Google and do a search on intertitles... it seems to me he discussed the creation of title cards there one day and conveyed more information than I've seen anywhere else.
The greatest intertitle I can think of appears in Harold Lloyd's
For Heaven's Sake (1926), but it's not by Beanie Walker, it's from Ralph Spence, the king of the title-writers. It's that introductory title about the story being about a man with a mansion meeting a miss with a mission... it fits the movie's storyline just right and it's such an elegant play on words.
A lot of the great art titles from the late 1910s-early 1920s were painted by Ferdinand Pinney Earle, who was so highly regarded that he sometimes got screen credit for them. (He's also credited with something far less laudatory in Anthony Slide's
Silent Players, but that's another story.)