Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

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buskeat
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Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by buskeat » Fri Aug 07, 2020 1:29 pm

It's the Year of Priscilla Dean! Announced by Kino on Facebook today.

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Drifting (1923) and White Tiger (1923)
Directed by Tod Browning
Starring Priscilla Dean and Wallace Beery

After the runaway success of Outside the Law, director Tod Browning re-teamed with star Priscilla Dean on Drifting, another hard-boiled crime picture flavored with Orientalism. Set in a remote Chinese village, and staged on an epic scale, Dean stars as Cassie Cook, an opium trafficker caught between an undercover government agent (Matt Moore) and a fellow smuggler (Wallace Beery). Dean may have been the star, but it is Anna May Wong (age eighteen and on the brink of stardom), who steals the show during the film’s fiery climax.

An early attempt by Browning to infuse the crime melodrama with elements of the uncanny (spurring the evolution of the American horror film), White Tiger involves a band of jewel thieves who employ a chess-playing automaton to gain entry into the homes of the wealthy. But their elaborate plans are haunted by omens, and they seem doomed to an inescapable fate. This disc also contains the only surviving footage of Browning and Dean’s 1919 The Exquisite Thief, one of the key films in establishing Dean’s persona as the glamorous jewel thief.

Special features:
• Drifting 4K Restoration by George Eastman Museum
• Audio commentary for Drifting by film historian Anthony Slide
• Musical score by Anton Sanko
• Audio commentary for White Tiger by film historian Bret Wood
• Musical score by Andrew Earle Simpson
• Fragment of the “lost” Tod Browning/Priscilla Dean film The Exquisite Thief
————————————————————
Rob Kozlowski
www.robkozlowski.com
“Becoming Nick and Nora: The Thin Man and the Films of William Powell and Myrna Loy” coming in August 2023 from Applause Books

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Salty Dog
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by Salty Dog » Fri Aug 07, 2020 2:39 pm

White Tiger also includes Raymond Griffith in a supporting role.
Bill Coleman

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alicefaye
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by alicefaye » Fri Aug 07, 2020 3:11 pm

White Tiger involves a band of jewel thieves who employ a chess-playing automaton to gain entry into the homes of the wealthy.
I wonder, is this where Charlie Chan In The Wax Museum got the idea from? I always found the chess-playing dummy aspect to be a bit of a sore thumb.

Otherwise, White Tiger sounds particularly fascinating, a little more so than Drifting. I must say I've learned more about the world of silents as a part of this community than I ever did reading about them.
Our story has nothing to do with the present.

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Frame Rate
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by Frame Rate » Fri Aug 07, 2020 5:36 pm

alicefaye wrote:
Fri Aug 07, 2020 3:11 pm
I wonder, is this where Charlie Chan In The Wax Museum got the idea from?
The original inspiration was a real-life, historical scam that reportedly "checkmated" such VIP's of yesteryear as Ben Franklin and Napoleon:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Turk

Two terrific French films (1927 and 1938) were later based on a popular 1926 novel that also fictionalized the invention and exploitation of the deceptive contrivance. The silent was restored by Brownlow & Gill and the talkie recently came out on a French DVD.
If only our opinions were as variable as the pre-talkie cranking speed...

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alicefaye
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by alicefaye » Fri Aug 07, 2020 5:45 pm

Frame Rate wrote:
Fri Aug 07, 2020 5:36 pm
The original inspiration was a real-life, historical scam that reportedly "checkmated" such VIP's of yesteryear as Ben Franklin and Napoleon:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Turk

Two terrific French films (1927 and 1938) were later based on a popular 1926 novel that also fictionalized the invention and exploitation of the deceptive contrivance. The silent was restored by Brownlow & Gill and the talkie recently came out on a French DVD.
Fascinating! Thank you for a little history lesson. I feel as though I'd read about this contraption somewhere before but not in enough depth to really remember it. It makes the Turk's appearance in that Charlie Chan movie more sensible as well, as the entire titular museum's naturally based around historical personages both famous and infamous.
Our story has nothing to do with the present.

Abbott and Costello scared me. Were they out there? I prayed not.
- Jeanine Basinger, The Star Machine

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bgp
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by bgp » Fri Aug 07, 2020 7:11 pm

Loving these Kino announcements as of late!

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DavidWelling
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by DavidWelling » Sat Aug 08, 2020 5:27 pm

Woo-hoo!!!! I'm in for anything with Priscilla Dean. This here is a double dose. I've seen White Tiger, and yes, the bonus of getting Raymond Griffith in the film makes it especially good. Kino, keep them coming!

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silentsaregolden
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by silentsaregolden » Sun Aug 09, 2020 8:14 am

Salty Dog wrote:
Fri Aug 07, 2020 2:39 pm
White Tiger also includes Raymond Griffith in a supporting role.
Supporting role, yes, particularly since Priscilla Dean was the bigger star at the time. But I’d like to suggest he should be elevated to a little higher status as “costar” in this one since his screen time and contribution to the film are equal to Dean’s. It’s an excellent film, and Griffith is superb in this dramatic role.
Silents Are Golden
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silentfilm
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by silentfilm » Mon Aug 10, 2020 12:01 pm

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Universal didn't think much of White Tiber (1922) when it was filmed. It was shelved for about a year before it was released. It was a freelancing, non-comedy role for Griffith.

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Jim Roots
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Re: Drifting/White Tiger from Kino Classics

Post by Jim Roots » Mon Aug 10, 2020 12:55 pm

A small point of interest: White Tiger is the film in which Griffith uses accurate Sign language to say (falsely, for story purposes), "I'm deaf."

He also uses a few other signs in this film, but without the guidance of Granville Redmond (as he had for You'd Be Surprised), they are mostly either gibberish or fake. Seeing that clear "I'm deaf", though, is an electrifying moment for those of us who are.

Jim

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