Silent Movies General

Does anyone else on Sup Forums really enjoy Silent Films?

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Huh. Guess not :/

Sup Forums is all about Game of Plebs and capeshit these days, everyone who genuinely likes films have been driven out long ago. Save yourself while you still can.

It doesn't have to be that way. Be the change you want to see in the world, user

Well alright then, I'll entertain this thread since it's here and there is nothing better on the board.
D.W. Griffith was a master of an art form that didn't even exist in his time. Too bad that the very valid points he makes in Intolerance are entirely disregarded thanks to the KKK scenes in Birth of a Nation.

Yeah, it's a real shame the guy is remembered for The Birth of a Nation instead of something like Broken Blossoms. By modern standards, BB is racist, but that's all revisionist bullshit history. For its time it made a very daring statement about love reaching across cultural and racial lines. And yet the guy still gets pinned with the reputation of being a racist against miscegenation all because his first film is so gloriously propagandistic for the wrong side.

As for Buster Keaton and the old comics, I've always thought it was really impressive what they managed to do with the means they had available. Like the scene of the falling wall where he's standing in the window as it crashes down over him. Those guys had balls of steel.

Or comedies* I guess they're called. Fucking english.

Harold Lloyd, the often forgotten third comedian/slapstick/stunt pioneer pictured here was actually afraid of heights.

I agree. Movie stars are pussies nowadays. Go climb a clock, you millionaire faggots. Prove you're worth something more than a "performance" where you spend the whole movie in closeups.

The most charming aspect of silent films is that it's often very obvious that it was such a new industry and they were simply trying push the boundaries. The level of creativity the writers and directors had back then was so much greater than the mass produced crap of today.

I really tried many years ago but they just bore me to death and the overacting is jarring. The only exceptions are german expressionism films.

Maybe they'd like this
vimeo.com/129072983

>vimeo.com/129072983
A noble effort, but even given the silent treatment, The Phantom Menace is still a shit film.

Try The Big Parade by King Vidor. It's a rarity in that it's a WWI movie made in the wake of the actual war. The movie is surprisingly modern. Most people I know who have trouble with Silent Films can at least enjoy The Big Parade and for a couple of my friends it's led them to seek out other stuff.

actually, it was based on a bestselling novel. griffith didn't come up with the plot

I think the one silent movie almost everyone can enjoy is Sunrise, but mostly because Murnau was way ahead of his time, and at least decade ahead of 20s Hollywood.

Well, yeah. Sunrise is pretty unanimously agreed to be the high-water mark for Silent Cinema. I was trying so suggest a path slightly less trodden, but still worthwhile.

My point being people should watch more King Vidor.

One final bump

The Wind is a 9/10 silent
Wings is up there too

op have you watched anything from kirsanoff?

I recoginze that this intertitle is from Intolerance, at least. Watched von Stroheim's The Merry Widow last night and didn't think it was very good.

I watched The Big Parade years ago on VHS and thought of it a lot when I was watching The Merry Widow last night, because of John Gilbert. He's in The Big Parade, if I'm not misremembering?

>Georges Méliès burned his films in a bucket
>The baby from Repas de bébé died of the flu at age 24

kinugasa goat

Who likes La Roué?

bump