Silents are Golden: The American Revolution On The Silent Screen

The American Revolution On The Silent Screen

America (1924) 1
America (1924)

It’s fascinating to see how American silent filmmakers portrayed events from U.S. history. Just think how much closer they were in time to events that are practically mythical to us today. In 1915, the Civil War had taken place only 50 years prior. In 1925, the American Revolution itself was barely reaching its 150th anniversary. And indeed, it’s easy to find an abundance of silent Civil War films, tales from the pioneer days, propagandistic WWI films, and of course an overwhelming amount of silent Westerns. But what about stories from the American Revolution?

These seemed to be much fewer and farther between, much like they still are today. Nowadays it’s easy to blame modern filmmakers for having a simple lack of interest in Revolutionary War stories or for audiences being less drawn to the aesthetics of powdered hair and knee breeches. But why the sparseness way back in the silent film days?  Wasn’t this a time when there was a strong reverence for figures like George Washington and organizations like the Daughters of the American Revolution were very well-known?

Actress Claire Windsor “impersonating Betsy Ross” in Picture-Play magazine
Actress Claire Windsor “impersonating Betsy Ross”
 in Picture-Play magazine.

Perhaps we can point to a few reasons. In cinema’s earliest days, the 1890s-1900s, films were very focused on contemporary events. The excitement over capturing “life as it really was” meant cameramen were quick to capture parades, military drills, footage of famous figures, street scenes, and any other contemporary events they could reach with their cameras. By the 1910s short fictional stories had grown in popularity, as did reenactments of historical events, yet Revolutionary War films were still relatively rare. Perhaps the 18th century costuming was a drawback for most studios with meager budgets.

It’s probable, too, that both filmmakers and their audiences had grown up enamored with Civil War stories and were more excited to see them on the screen. More than a few likely had fathers, grandfathers and other relatives who’d actually fought in the conflict. And then there’s the timing: as the film industry matured throughout the 1910s and epic battle scenes were growing more common, WWI started. Films with negative depictions of our British allies were, shall we say, frowned upon. By the 1920s, fatigue from the four-year Great War and a surging interest in all things modern perhaps meant that audiences were less interested in wigs-and-muskets tales.

With all that said, what are some prominent examples of silent Revolutionary War films? What kinds of stories did filmmakers find exciting or of enough importance to try to immortalize in film?


The Hessian Renegades (1909)

The Hessian Renegades (1909)

From 1908 to 1914, director D.W. Griffith made an astonishing 500 short films for the American Biograph Company. Aside from the plethora of dramatic stories, short romances, and even comedies, he would sometimes tackle subjects that drew from history. The Hessian Renegades told the story of a father who seeks revenge for the death of his son, an army dispatcher who’s killed by German mercenaries (“Hessian”). While the acting may seem stilted to our eyes, it’s done with sincerity and an eye towards the seriousness of the high-stakes story. As a bonus, it features Mary Pickford–then new to films–who disguises herself as a mercenary.


The Heart of a Hero (1916)

The Heart of a Hero (1916)

This feature told the dramatic story of Nathan Hale, he of the “I only regret that I have but one life to give for my country” quote fame. It was based on the 1898 play Nathan Hale by Clyde Fitch, the most popular American playwright at that point in time. It includes one of those obligatory romances–in this case between Hale and his student–and a solemn outdoor death sequence. Directed with care and featuring costumes reportedly based on authentic 18th century clothing, it was praised for the respectful way it treated historic events but was also criticized by Moving Picture World for having a French, rather than American, director.


Betsy Ross (1917)

Betsy Ross (1917)

This  if very fictionalized, feature stars Alice Brady as the famed maker of the first official U.S. flag. Much of the film centers upon Betsy’s rivalry with her sister over the affections of a British officer. Eventually there is a duel, both Betsy and her sister end up marrying different men, Betsy starts a small business, and she eventually gets suspected of harboring a spy (it all seems a bit off topic). We also see her receive her commission from George Washington himself to create the first American flag. This was made by the World Film Company in Fort Lee, New Jersey, one of the dwindling number of studios still making films on the East coast rather than sunny southern California.


Janice Meredith (1924)

Janice Meredith (1924)

This Marion Davies costume drama, well-funded by her significant other William Randolph Hearst, was not a major hit but did respectably well. It followed the exploits of the lively Janice Meredith, a Tory girl who flirts with both Americans and the British. She just happens to become involved in assisting Paul Revere on his famous ride and even George Washington during his fateful crossing of the Delaware. Marie Antoinette and Benjamin Franklin also make appearances. The lengthy film tried to be a bit of everything–dramatic, humorous, even a bit artsy. It also featured a character played by W.C. Fields, his first 1920s film role, and the silent era Harrison FordC.


America (1924)

America (1924)

In the 1920s, D.W. Griffith was hoping to create an epic film that would do for the American Revolution what his weighty The Birth of a Nation (1915) did for the Civil War. Lengthy and ambitiously presented, it jumped between both Patriot and Loyalist viewpoints and depicted many famous incidents such as the Battle of Bunker Hill and the Siege of Yorktown. Spies, Indian attacks, and large-scale battle scenes abound. While less controversial than his 1915 Civil War epic and certainly big on battlefield spectacle, plot points floated confusingly between various characters and critics felt the film was out of step with what was popular at the time. Nonetheless it makes for interesting viewing today, especially around any Fourth of July.

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Classic Movie Travels: Rosalind Byrne

Classic Movie Travels: Rosalind Byrne

Rosalind Byrne
Rosalind Byrne

Rosalind Loretta Mooney, later know as Rosalind Byrne, was born on February 19, 1904, in St Marys, Ohio, to William and Mary Mooney. Her parents were prominent members of the community and her father worked as a judge. Tragically, he passed away the year she was born. William and Mary had five children: Rosalind, Catherine, Eilleen, Mary, and Michael. Sadly, Catherine and Michael passed away before Rosalind was born.

As a child, Mooney attended Immaculate Heart Convent for her education. She enjoyed participating in theatrical productions and soon pursued a career as an actress, taking on the stage name of Rosalind Byrne.

By 1920, she and her mother moved to California. She made her screen debut at age 19 in the film Flaming Youth (1923), albeit uncredited, as Fabian Flapper, thanks to her catching the eye of director John Francis Dillon at First National.

Rosalind Byrne and Buster Keaton
Rosalind with Buster Keaton

Over the years, she appeared in minor roles, though she worked alongside some of the era’s major stars. Her debut film, Flaming Youth (1923), starred Colleen Moore. She could also be spotted with Buster Keaton in Sherlock Jr. (1923) as the box office cashier and with Keaton again in Seven Chances (1925) as the hat check girl. She appeared in The Freshman (1925) with Harold Lloyd as a girl at a dance in a delightful comedy bit as his suspenders tangle with her attire. She also performed in The Wizard of Oz (1925) as the Herald Trumpeter and in Long Pants (1927) with Harry Langdon, among many other roles.

In addition, she worked in several more films with other notable individuals in the industry. This included credits in King Vidor’s Wine of Youth (1924). Frank Capra’s That Certain Thing (1928), Dorothy Arzner’s Ten Modern Commandments (1927), Tom Buckingham’s What Price Beauty? (1928), and more. Her sole talkie appearance was in Innocents of Paris (1929) with Maurice Chevalier.

Nonetheless, Byrne’s film career did not thrive as much as studio executives expected. Ultimately, Byrne left the film industry in 1929, never to return.

In 1932, she married Assistant Vice President of the First National Bank of Chicago Thomas Humphrey Beacom Jr. in St. Joseph, Indiana. They resided in Wilmette, Illinois, and later in Winnetka, Illinois, where they raised two children: Mary Constance “Connie” Beacom and Thomas Humphrey “Terry” Beacom III. They remained married until Beacom’s passing in 1962.

Byrne passed away in 1989 at age 85. She is at rest at All Saints Catholic Cemetery and Mausoleum in Des Plaines, Illinois.

Today, some of Byrne’s homes remain. In 1910, Byrne, her mother, and her sisters resided at 221 S. Wayne St., St. Marys, Ohio, along with a servant named Jeanette Hamilton. This home no longer stands.

By 1920, Byrne, her mother, and her sisters moved to 1922 N. St Andrew’s Pl., Los Angeles, California. This home stands.

1922 N. St Andrew’s Pl., Los Angeles, California
1922 N. St Andrew’s Pl.

In 1930, the family lived at 1953 Tamarind Ave., Los Angeles, California. This home has since been razed.

By 1940, Byrne moved to Illinois. Byrne, her husband, and their two children lived at 725 Greenwood Ave., Wilmette, Illinois. This home remains.

725 Greenwood Ave., Wilmette, Illinois
725 Greenwood Ave.

In 1950, they had already relocated to 552 Ridge Rd., Winnetka, Illinois. This home also stands.

552 Ridge Rd., Winnetka, Illinois
552 Ridge Rd.

By 1974, Byrne maintained an address at 1630 Sheridan Rd., Wilmette, Illinois, which also remains.

All Saints Catholic Cemetery and Mausoleum is located at 700 N. River Rd., Des Plaines, Illinois. She is buried in the cemetery’s older section immediately across the street from the larger, newer section.

–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek pens our monthly Classic Movie Travels column. You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek, Ph.D., is a film historian, professor, and avid scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the “Hometowns to Hollywood” blog, in which she profiles her trips to the hometowns of classic Hollywood stars. She has also been featured on the popular classic film-oriented television network, Turner Classic Movies. A regular columnist for Classic Movie Hub, her articles have appeared in TCM Backlot, Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, The Dark Pages Film Noir Newsletter, and Chicago Art Deco Society Magazine.

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Western RoundUp: Bend of the River (1952)

Bend of the River (1952)

Bend of the River (1952), starring James Stewart and directed by Anthony Mann, is not just one of my favorite Westerns, it’s one of my very favorite films.

Bend of the River Poster 1

Readers with long memories may recall I wrote about Bend of the River here way back in 2018, in my introductory column about my favorite Westerns.  A few years later, I recommended it in my column on Westerns for young viewers.

The impetus for this full-length review is the release of a new Bend of the River Blu-ray by Kino Lorber Studio Classics.

Bend of the River Blu Ray 2026

Kino Lorber previously released Bend of the River on Blu-ray about seven years ago, in 2019.  It was a nice-looking disc but has been supplanted by a far better Blu-ray featuring a new restoration by Universal Pictures in collaboration with the Film Foundation.

The restoration seen on the disc is from a 4K scan of the original 35mm three-strip Technicolor negative.

The new Blu-ray looks, in a word, spectacular, and I wanted to share the news on this release with my Western RoundUp readers!

Bend of the River Still 1 - Adams and Stewart

Bend of the River was the second of Stewart and Mann’s eight collaborations, following Winchester ’73 (1950). I wrote about Winchester ‘73 here after seeing it at the 2019 TCM Classic Film Festival, if any readers would like to visit that review for additional context. Winchester ’73 might possibly be the best of the Stewart-Mann films, but Bend of the River is my favorite.

Bend of the River Lobby Card

Bend of the River has a very good screenplay by Borden Chase; readers may recall I recently visited Chase’s gravesite at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills.  His script was based on a novel titled Bend of the Snake by Bill Gulick.

The film tells the story of Glynn McLyntock (Stewart), a man with a violent past seeking to reform and live a new life, leading a group of settlers to Oregon.

Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart, Bend of the River
Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart

McLyntock saves a stranger, Emerson Cole (Arthur Kennedy), from a lynch mob, but while the grateful Cole is initially helpful to McLyntock in various ways, bit by bit Cole’s darker side emerges.  Even having won the love of settler Laura Baile (Julia “Julie” Adams) is not enough for Cole, who ultimately betrays all of his new friends.

Julie Adams, Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart, Bend of the River
Julie Adams, Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart

It’s a relatively short film, at 91 minutes, but I always appreciate movies which tell their stories efficiently. I do think Julie Adams’ character could have used a couple more minutes of screen time to better develop her character, but that’s truly my only criticism of a movie I’ve affectionately termed “movie comfort food.” 

Bend of the River Still 2 - Adams and Stewart

The film has a marvelous mixture of interesting characters, exciting action set pieces, and beautiful locations, filmed in Technicolor by Irving Glassberg.  It’s stood up to countless repeat viewings over the years, and I tend to notice new things on each viewing, which for me is one of the marks of a good film.

Rock Hudson, Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart, Bend of the River
Rock Hudson, Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart

Stewart is outstanding straddling the line between being a gallant, kind romantic and someone who clearly has a questionable past. Stewart let his darker side come out at appropriate times in his Mann Westerns, and when he says “You’ll be seein’ me!” to Kennedy’s Cole in this film, it’s absolutely chilling.  No doubt he means it.

There’s also humor to go along with the dark and upsetting moments; in fact, McLyntock and Cole’s initial lighthearted camaraderie is one reason Cole’s ultimate betrayal hits so hard. One of the film’s most interesting themes, on the possibility of redemption and what that looks like, is illustrated by these two men, who make very different choices as far as how they will live the rest of their lives.

When I saw Julie Adams interviewed at a 2011 screening of the film, she said she would watch Stewart film his closeups and marvel over what he could convey simply with his eyes; she said she worked with many actors over the years and few could match Stewart’s skills in front of a camera.  Here we see quiet love, fear, anger, and hurt all conveyed through Stewart’s expressive eyes.

Bend of the River Still 3 - Adams and Stewart

There’s a wonderfully deep cast, including Rock Hudson as a charming gambler who joins the settlers and is sweet on Adams’ younger sister (Lori Nelson).

Rock Hudson, Jay C. Flippen, Julie Adams, Bend of the River
Rock Hudson, Jay C. Flippen, Julie Adams

Mann regulars Jay C. Flippen and Harry Morgan are on hand, along with Frank Ferguson, Jack Lambert, Royal Dano, Howard Petrie, Lillian Randolph, and Frances Bavier.

Chubby Johnson and Stepin Fetchit, as the captain of a paddlewheeler and his righthand man, have a sweet friendship that adds another enjoyable dimension to the movie.

Stepin Fetchit, Chubby Johnson, Bend of the River
Stepin Fetchit, Chubby Johnson

Kino Lorber Studio Classics has provided not one but two commentary tracks with this release: A commentary by Toby Roan which was part of their original 2019 Blu-ray release, and a new track by Julie Kirgo and C. Courtney Joyner.

I’ve listened to Roan’s track in the past, which includes detailed backgrounds on all of the cast and interesting information on some of the difficulties faced by the company shooting at remote locations in Oregon.

Joyner is a Westerns expert who’s been a guest at the Lone Pine Film Festival.  Having also enjoyed tracks by Kirgo in the past, I’m looking forward to listening to the new commentary track soon.

Bend of the River Poster 2

The disc also includes the trailer and a gallery of five additional trailers for other Westerns available from Kino Lorber.

As mentioned at the outset, this new Blu-ray print is outstanding and I highly recommend it.

Thanks to Kino Lorber for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray.

It’s hard to believe, but as briefly referenced at the outset of this piece, June 2026 marks my eighth anniversary writing the Western RoundUp column. My continued thanks to Classic Movie Hub and all who support this column!

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

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Silents are Golden: A Closer Look At Wings (1927)

A Closer Look At Wings (1927)

Wings, Charles Buddy Rogers, Clara Bow, and Richard Arlen
Charles ‘Buddy’ Rogers, Clara Bow, and Richard Arlen

References to Wings (1927) are most commonly trotted out during awards seasons, as a bit of obligatory trivia answering the question: “What was the first movie to be given the Oscar for Best Picture?” Usually this is as far as the trivia will go, which is a shame. For Wings was one of the most dynamic, gloriously-directed films of the late silent era, just as exciting and impressive today as it was a century ago.

Wings was created during the mid-1920s revival of World War I films, kicked off by the incredible success of MGM’s The Big Parade (1925). After 1918 there had been relatively few films set during the Great War, perhaps due to public fatigue or perhaps because some time was still needed to heal the wounds. However, while people in the optimistic atmosphere of the Roaring Twenties may have wanted to move on from that sad era, they certainly had no intention of forgetting it.

Wings, Charles 'Buddy' Rogers and Clara Bow
Rogers and Bow

Paramount would put director William A. Wellman in charge of the big-budget project, which was based on an unfinished novel by John Monk Saunders. A fast worker and a dynamic personality, “Wild Bill” was a descendant of one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence and had even served as a fighter pilot during the war. He walked with a permanent limp due to being shot down by German anti-aircraft guns in 1918. Wings would not be an easy production for him, as it involved hundreds of extras and real-life recreations of aerial combat scenes which were highly weather-dependent, but his qualifications for such a story were undeniable.

Richard Arlen and Buddy Rogers were chosen to be the main leads David and Jack, small town youths who enlist to be fighter pilots in WWI. Arlen had been a fighter pilot in Canada’s Royal Flying Corps during the war and would bring a steady authenticity to his role. The wholesome young Rogers, born and raised in Kansas and advertised as “America’s Boyfriend,” would undergo pilot training for the film’s authentic aerial combat scenes. 

Wings, Richard Arlen
Arlen

The story of Wings would be tweaked to include Paramount’s biggest star at the time, the vivacious flapper icon Clara Bow. The saucer-eyed Bow, famously dubbed the “‘It’ Girl” by the influential romance novelist Elinor Glyn, had starred in numerous Jazz Age hits such as The Plastic Age (1925) and Kid Boots (1926). Her girl-next-door character Mary Preston provided a love triangle for Arlen and Rogers and her image was used prominently on the film’s posters and lobby cards.

Wings, poster

One actor hired to play a minor role would go on to fame and fortune: Gary Cooper. He played Cadet White, David and Jack’s tent mate in Germany who’s killed in a flight training accident the same day they met. While his screen time was only a few minutes, he was a charismatic presence and his character’s sudden demise was a deeply effective way to convey the shocking cost of the war. 

Wings, Charles 'Buddy' Rogers, Richard Arlen, Gary Cooper
Rogers, Arlen, and Gary Cooper

Wings was dedicated “to those young warriors of the sky whose wings are folded about them forever,” as the opening title cards state. Wellman was determined to do them justice. Many of the battle scenes were shot on several acres of land in San Antonio, Texas that were transformed into trenches and pockmarked with faux shellholes. The biplanes used in the film were repainted Thomas-Morse MB-3s and Curtiss P-1 Hawks, many obtained with assistance from Washington. Thousands of soldiers were loaned from the Army as extras, and some of the pilots were from the U.S. Army Air Corps. Wellman directed the large-scale battle scenes capably, often detonating any explosives himself. He also wasn’t afraid to clash with the military personnel who were brought in to supervise the production, insisting on being the one who was ultimately in charge.

Wings

Filming the dogfights proved easier said than done, since clouds were needed for the aerial scenes and the stubbornly clear skies made the production drag on for many weeks. As he explained patiently to Paramount, Wellman wanted to have clouds in the background to contrast with the moving planes to show just how swiftly they were flying. There was also the question of how to film Arlen and Rogers as they flew their planes. Cameras would be fixed to the planes in front of their faces, and both actors would have to not only fly the rickety biplanes but operate the cameras while acting in the air.

Rogers would be trained to fly by Lieutenant Hoyt Vandenberg (who would one day become a four-star general in World War II). The young actor didn’t have a strong stomach for flying and would frequently get sick when he landed, but would always gamely climb back in the plane for another takeoff. Vandenberg would fly with Rogers for his first few aerial scenes and operate the camera while he gained more experience at the controls.

Wings, William Wellman on location
William Wellman on location

The camera innovations didn’t end with the aerial scenes. The film’s most famous shot today was set in Paris’s famous Folies Bergère and had the camera appear to float through a number of tables occupied by guests, zooming in on a seated Buddy Rogers. This was achieved by fastening a dolly to a track on the ceiling and having the camera operator lie on his stomach on a platform underneath. As it smoothly passed over the tables, the extras sprang back just as it went between them. One amusing bit of trivia is that Rogers, shown getting drunk on champagne, was literally drunk during the scene. Since Rogers had never had alcohol before, Wellman decided to simply give him real champagne.

Wings on the set

Wings would be released to considerable excitement and acclaim. It premiered in New York City and would run for an incredible 63 weeks before trickling down to the smaller theaters. Over the next few years its box office is thought to have totalled an impressive $3.6 million, especially considering ticket prices at the time. It was also the first film to receive the industry’s highest honor: the Academy Award for Best Picture, awarded in 1929 and chosen from 1927-28 films. It narrowly escaped sharing the honor with F.W. Murnau’s Sunrise (1927), chosen for the short-lived category of Unique and Artistic Production. It was retroactively decided that only having a Best Picture made the most sense.

Today, the sprawling battlefields and heart-stopping dogfights of Wings have aged phenomenally well–indeed, they seem hardly to have aged at all. And as the decades keep marching by, it has an uncanny ability to make a war that is often overshadowed by WWII seem far more real. We can understand in a general sense how the Great War of 1914-18 changed history, but works of art like Wings help us understand on a personal level the sacrifices of those countless soldiers, pilots and other brave folks of the past.

Wings, Clara Bow
Bow

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Monsters and Matinees: Let’s Hear it for the Magnificent Octopus on Film

Let’s Hear it for the Magnificent Octopus on Film

Call me a cephalophile. Or an octo-enthusiast. Either one speaks to my obsession with the octopus in film.

It is such a dramatic creature with those eight elongated tentacles that even a brief appearance can jolt a movie awake. An octopus lurking in a cave is like a killer in a closet. “Run!” you want to scream. “Run!”

The giant octopus film is one of my favorite genres. I watch these movies on repeat, marveling at the size of the sea creature and how those tentacles work as separate appendages to find victims no matter where they run.

The octopus in Tentacles is so large it can wrap around an entire boat and consume all who are on it.

But things got complicated for me in May when scientists discovered the most adorable tiny blue octopus near the Galapagos Islands. The little cutey is only the size of a golf ball. Then Netflix released the drama “Remarkably Bright Creatures” starring an octopus named Marcellus who is a showstopper. (Don’t yell at me yet, this ties into classic movies.)

Neither looks like the monsters I’m used to seeing in movies. One fits in the palm of your hand, the other in an aquarium tank. When Marcellus colorfully unfurls himself, he is majestic. For the first time I saw the true beauty of an octopus and could admire it for the magnificent creature it is, despite Marcellus being created via visual effects.

Marcellus, the octopus in the new film Remarkably Bright Creatures is far different than the giant monsters of classic cinema. (Courtesy Netflix)

Marcellus, who narrates the film, is nonviolent, smart and kind as he helps two lonely people, an elderly widow (Sally Field) and a lost young man (Lewis Pullman), find their way.

Now I feel feel guilty for loving the killer octopus movies of classic cinema. But I can’t help it. Even presented as a monster, the octopus is a splendid creature. Watch it wrap its tentacles around the Golden Gate Bridge in It Came From Beneath Sea. See it clutch a submarine in Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. Look as it rises during the full moon in The Monster on the Ocean Floor (OK, it looks a bit lame). The octopus deserves our respect.

Now this is a giant octopus as seen in Ray Harryhausen’s It Came from Beneath the Sea.

Yes, I know the killer octopus is not based in reality. There is no recording of one killing a human. And though there are gigantic ones deep in the ocean, they stay at those great depths. The legends about the octopus-like Kraken and devil fish that killed sailors are just legends, but they live in our imaginations. (Wasn’t the mythical Kraken great in Clash of the Titans and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest?)

In film, the octopus and its close relative the squid (there is a difference) continue to entertain, terrorize and captivate moviegoers. Sometimes they are the star as in It Came from Beneath the Sea, the 1955 film that showcased Ray Harryhausen’s groundbreaking stop-motion animation work. But a quick cameo is enough to be memorable such an attack on young Robert Wagner in Beneath the 12-Mile Reef (1953) and John Wayne’s two underwater encounters in the adventure films Reap the Wild Wind (1942) and Wake of the Red Witch (1948). (Sadly, it didn’t always turn out well for Wayne.)

That’s John Wayne in the grip of an octopus in the 1948 film Wake of the Red Witch. It wasn’t the only time on film that he battled an oversized cephalopod.

A quick cameo can be used for comic relief such as Bob Hope’s amusing meeting with a squid in Road to Bali (1952). Or it’s pure entertainment like the animated octopus serenading Esther Williams in Dangerous When Wet (1953).

THE OCTOPUS DEBUT

“Look!! An octopus has got him.”

And with those chilling words, read on an intertitle, the first octopus was seen on film in the 1916 adaptation of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.

This intertitle from the 1916 silent film “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” signifies the debut of the octopus in film.

Though visionary filmmaker Georges Méliès was the first to adapt the Jules Verne novel with his 1907 short, this 1916 film was the first full-length adaptation. This was also the first full-length movie filmed underwater through the work of pioneering undersea photographers George and J. Ernest Williamson. (However, it was not filmed with an underwater camera since that technology was still to come.)

This film blends elements of two Verne novels – 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and Mysterious Island – omitting quite a bit of both stories but keeping the recognizable Captain Nemo and Nautilus submarine.

The octopus scene is brief and the creature is barely larger than the diver it is attacking but think about how thrilling it must have been to see this 1916!  The film was made over two years by Universal Film Manufacturing Co., meaning it could be considered a Universal monster film! It was selected for the National Film Registry in 2016.

The underwater men are dwarfed by the creature they have let loose to find the humans in the 1929 film The Mysterious Island.

Thirteen years later, the octopus would re-emerge in another adaptation of a Verne novel, the 1929 film “The Mysterious Island” when “underwater men” unleashed “a sluggish monster of terrific strength.”

 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea was filmed multiple times. The most famous version is the 1954 Disney Technicolor film with a great cast led by Kirk Douglas, James Mason and Peter Lorre. The giant squid is worthy of the killer designation with tentacles so long they wrapped around the Nautilus and attack multiple men at once. It’s a rollicking sci-fi adventure.

Here are more films to consider.

The creature rises to attack the Golden Gate Bridge in an iconic scene from It Came from Beneath the Sea.

It Came from Beneath the Sea(1955)

This is the granddaddy of them all, filled with iconic images created by Ray Harryhausen of an octopus attacking boats, beaches and cities. Blame the bomb for this gigantic creature that was forced to rise from the sea in search of food after turning radioactive. The film teases with glimpses of a tentacle here or there, then shows the full power of the beast when it attacks San Francisco, destroying Fisherman’s Wharf and the Golden Gate Bridge, and crushing everything in its way. That’s despite the fact it only had six tentacles due to budget constraints. (Harryhausen called it his “sixtopus.”)

There is an awkward romantic triangle between scientists played by Faith Domergue and Donald Curtis and a brash military commander played by Kenneth Tobey. It would be a better film without this subplot that never feels right.

Villagers who talked of a creature with one glaring red eye during a full moon weren’t seeing things in Monster from the Ocean Floor, the first full-length feature produced by Roger Corman.

 Monster from the Ocean Floor (1954)

This giant squid film is important to movie history because it is the first feature produced by Roger Corman. It was shot in only six days on an ultra-low budget, a formula Corman would use throughout his 70-year career.

An artist visiting a seaside Mexican village has her interest piqued by talk of a man-eating devil creature. Her handsome new friend is a marine biologist who doesn’t believe it, but she keeps digging around to satisfy her curiosity. She finally gets the cynical scientist on board after learning the sightings of the creature with one “big red eye” started at the same time as radiation experiments in the Bikini Atoll.

Since we’re on the topic of Corman and an octopus, I will take two sentences to plug one of the greatest octopus movies ever made even though it doesn’t fit into the “classic film” time frame. In 2010, Corman produced Sharktopus, a film with a title that tells you everything you need to know about the creature.

Bela Lugosi talks to his octopus friend in the Ed Wood film “Bride of the Monster.”

“Bride of the Monster”(1955)

Who doesn’t want a pet octopus to do their evil bidding? In this Ed Wood film, a scientist conducts experiments in an isolated house where an octopus comes in handy to get rid of any human “evidence.”

A nearby town lives in fear after 12 people (and counting) mysteriously disappear over three months which is blamed on the “Monster of Lake Marsh.” The police aren’t getting anywhere but feisty reporter Janet (played by Loretta King) will put herself in harm’s way to learn the truth and get her story.

Bela Lugosi plays Dr. Vornoff, a scientist who is a genius and a bit mad. That’s what happens when you experiment with atomic energy for 20 years to create super beings. He lives with his mute assistant Lobo (played by Tor Johnson), who he mistreats, and the pet octopus in a laboratory tank that is somehow connected to the lake. Bonus points for quicksand and crocodiles.

Lugosi’s character often talks to the octopus through a tiny window, but they are never in the same space together. The mechanical octopus was previously used in the John Wayne film Wake of the Red Witch.

The giant squid wraps a colorful tentacle around a diver in Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea(1961)

This not only has a squid and octopus, but it’s also a full-on disaster film from the master of the genre, Irwin Allen. And it has an all-star cast including Walter Pidgeon, Joan Fontaine, Barbara Eden,  Michael Ansara, Robert Sterling and Frankie Avalon (who also sings the title song). What more could you want?

The world is on fire after a meteor shower penetrates the Van Allen radiation belt (this is a real thing), sending temperatures soaring past 135 degrees and climbing daily. Cities are destroyed, governments collapse and the only one with a plan beyond “waiting it out” is Admiral Nelson (Walter Pidgeon) whose brilliance is considered by some to be on the edge of madness. (His detractors have nicknamed the Seaview, the new nuclear submarine he designed, Nelson’s Folly as they wait for it to fail.)

An octopus wraps its tentacles around the submarine in the 1961 film Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.

Nelson defies orders and takes the Seaview and its crew on a grueling voyage around the world to launch a nuclear missile into the belt. Danger is everywhere with the fire above the water, sabotage and possibly mutiny inside the Seaview, and killer creatures in the sea. There are two fantastic attacks from the cephalopod family:  An oversized squid assaults crew members outside the Seaview and later a giant octopus wraps itself around the submarine with its tentacles stuck on the windows.

The film’s success led to the ABC television series (1964-68) that included an episode based off the film’s plot called The Sky’s on Fire, one of the lines in the film.

In Tentacles, the giant creature not only feeds on humans but on underwater life, too, as a diver learns when he finds a shark graveyard.

Tentacles (1977)

This Italian-U.S. collaboration has a solid cast going for it including John Huston, Shelley Winters, Henry Fonda, Claude Akins and Bo Hopkins, but suffers from frequent comparisons to Jaws. I think that’s a bit overblown since if you are making a movie with a sea creature, there are built-in similarities. Still give Tentacles props for the bold move in the opening scene of the first victim (no spoiler here).

Bodies are found in a seaside resort town sucked of everything but their bones. (Gross.) Investigations lead to more questions than answers as the body count rises. A reporter (Huston, who is a startling site in this caftan-like pajamas) asks a lot of questions and wonders if the construction of a new underwater tunnel has a role in what is happening. I love the moment when it is proclaimed that there is a “giant octopus” and the tone of the film changes. A marine expert and killer whale trainer (Bo Hopkins) will help track the octopus with help from his aquatic friends.

The threat of the octopus is persistent through the film. Early attacks are quick and off screen; other times there’s a quick look at a large tentacle or a massive eye to give the scale of the creature. As the film progresses, the attacks become more intense with a few well-done scenes in terms of scope and terror including a harrowing attack on a boat race with children. The take down of vessels is done with the unexpected gracefulness of a dancer as its “legs” engulf the boats.

 Toni Ruberto for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Toni’s Monsters and Matinees articles here.

Toni Ruberto, born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., is an editor and writer at The Buffalo News. She shares her love for classic movies in her blog, Watching Forever and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led the offshoot group, Buffalo Classic Movie Buffs. She is proud to have put Buffalo and its glorious old movie palaces in the spotlight as the inaugural winner of the TCM in Your Hometown contest. You can find Toni on Twitter at @toniruberto or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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Noir Nook: Darkest Noirs

Noir Nook: Darkest Noirs

One of the features of film noir that I love most is the sheer “darkness” of the plots, characters, and themes. The darker, the better, in fact – no happy endings for me!

This month, at the Nook, I’m shining the spotlight on two of my favorite films noirs which – perhaps not so coincidentally – happen to be among the noirs I consider to be the darkest. Fair warning – if you haven’t seen these, you might want to take a stroll down a shadowy street and circle back after you’ve checked them out, because this post is going to be heavily spoilerific.

And away we go!


Criss Cross

One of the films that will be on every Top 10 Film Noir list that I ever compile is Criss Cross, released in 1949 and starring Burt Lancaster, Yvonne DeCarlo, and Dan Duryea. Generously employing flashbacks and voiceover narration, the film tells the story of Steve Thompson (Lancaster), an essentially stand-up guy with a fatal weakness for the wrong woman. That woman is Anna (DeCarlo), Steve’s ex-wife, turned girlfriend, turned ex-girlfriend, turned secret lover (whew!). And then there’s callous crime boss Slim Dundee (Duryea), whose marriage to Anna throws a sizable monkey wrench into the proceedings. And things really go awry when Steve covers for a clandestine meeting with Anna by pitching a payroll-truck robbery to Slim.

Dark Noirs Yvonne DeCarlo
Yvonne DeCarlo

These three characters clearly furnish a significant portion of the film’s bleak ambience. Steve is passionate but weak-willed and naïve, while Slim has a straightforward, indisputable aura of ruthlessness. But Anna? She’s all over the place – it’s not until the concluding minutes of the film, in fact, that we really see her true, deeply imbedded colors. Is she in love with Steve, or is she just physically attracted to him? Can Steve (or we) believe anything she says? Is she earnest or just a good actress? (And what about Naomi?) (IYKYK)

Dark Noirs Yvonne DeCarlo and Burt Lancaster_Parking Lot
Yvonne DeCarlo and Burt Lancaster

When we first meet Anna – in a nightclub parking lot during yet another furtive exchange with Steve – she’s nervous and concerned about her lover (“I’m all sick inside,” she shares), and she promises him in a tone overflowing with sincerity that “after this is all over,” she’ll make him forget about the past. Contrast this with her words and actions in her final scene; she leaves no doubt that she comes first in her life and that nothing – but nothing – will compromise her sense of self-preservation.


The Killing

This film is one that I have on both VHS and DVD, and have seen twice on the big screen – with its twisty-turny manipulation of time, outstanding ensemble cast, and perfect ending, The Killing is an absolute banger. The plot is simple: a racetrack payroll heist is carried out by a group of men from various walks, including mousy racetrack cashier, George Peatty (Elisha Cook, Jr.), and beat cop Randy Kennan (Ted deCorsia). The scheme is meticulously designed by Johnny Clay (Sterling Hayden), who has recently been released from prison after a five-year stint. Johnny provides a clear indication of his motivation for the crime when he declares, “Anytime you take a chance, you better be sure the rewards are worth the risk. Because they could put you away just as fast for a $10 heist as they can for a million-dollar job.” Unfortunately for Johnny and everyone else involved in the robbery, the adage about the best laid plans of mice and men was spot-on: they often go awry.

Dark Noir, Heist gang
The heist gang

Speaking of “everyone else involved in the robbery,” these individuals ranged in spirit and deed from a devoted husband caring for his invalid wife to a killer whose last words included a racial slur. It’s this fascinating contrast between good and bad that lays a solid foundation for the overall darkness that permeates the film – it’s rife with virtuous individuals like Johnny’s loyal girlfriend, Fay (Coleen Gray), or his overly admiring pal, Marvin Unger (Jay C. Flippen), but folks like these are overshadowed by the corrupt characters waiting in the wings, like George’s duplicitous, mercenary, and wholly unforgettable wife, Sherry (Marie Windsor).

In addition to the shadowy characters, the film’s last 12 minutes are as bleak as cold concrete, serving up a one-two-three punch of pure noir. First, there’s the scene where the members of the gang (sans Johnny) gather in Marvin’s apartment to divvy up the spoils from the daring racetrack heist, only to have their anticipatory revelry interrupted by Sherry’s lover (Vince Edwards) and his partner. These two fellas aim to walk away with the ill-gotten payroll gains, but less than a minute after they enter Marvin’s apartment, almost everybody is dead. And the hits just keep on coming. Two more bodies are added to the tally when George goes home to confront his wife and later, just when it appears that Johnny and Fay will fly off into the sunset with a suitcase full of cash, their dreams abruptly vanish like smoke in a windstorm – leaving Johnny to offer this dark commentary: “Eh. What’s the difference?”

Dark Noirs, Joe Turkel and Vince Edwards
Joe Turkel and Vince Edwards

What are your favorite dark noirs? Leave a comment and let me know . . . and stay tuned as I take a look at more of these uber-grim features in a future Noir Nook post!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

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Silver Screen Standards: The Devil Doll (1936)

Silver Screen Standards: The Devil Doll (1936)

There’s nothing standard about the wild plot of the 1936 horror film, The Devil Doll, with its miniaturized zombie killers, mad scientists, use of drag as part of an elaborate scheme for revenge, and extensive special effects work showcasing its titular dolls, but the people in front of and behind the camera are very much icons of 1930s Hollywood. Only Tod Browning could be the director of such a weird horror gem, but it might be surprising to see the great Lionel Barrymore in disguise as a little old lady, with Tarzan star Maureen O’Sullivan as his unsuspecting daughter. Writing credits for the picture include Browning, horror veterans Guy Endore and Garrett Fort, and, more surprisingly, Erich von Stroheim, best known for his work as a silent film director and Oscar-nominated actor. If you enjoy Dr. Pretorius’s homunculi in Bride of Frankenstein (1935), or later horror classics like Attack of the Puppet People (1958), you won’t want to miss The Devil Doll, but for most viewers the real attractions will be Lionel Barrymore and a demented Rafaela Ottiano as the masterminds behind the tiny terrorists.

Devil Doll, Lionel Barrymore, Henry B. Walthall, Rafaela Ottiano
Paul watches as Marcel and Malita demonstrate the effects of their shrinking process on a collection of dogs.

Barrymore stars as framed and wrongly imprisoned banker Paul Lavond, who has spent 17 years plotting his revenge before he escapes with a frail fellow inmate, a scientist named Marcel (Henry B. Walthall). After Marcel dies, Paul teams up with his widow, Malita (Rafaela Ottiano), to use Marcel’s miniaturization process as a means for vengeance against the three wealthy bankers who ruined Paul’s life and reputation. In Paris, Paul masquerades as kindly toy shop owner Madame Mandelip in order to get close to his targets but also to visit his blind, elderly mother (Lucy Beaumont) and his now-grown daughter, Lorraine (Maureen O’Sullivan), who doesn’t recognize the old woman as her long-absent father.

Devil Doll, Lionel Barrymore Drag
Paul escapes the police in Paris by disguising himself as an old woman known as Madame Mandelip.

Most classic movie fans will know Lionel Barrymore from his role as the scheming Mr. Potter in It’s a Wonderful Life (1946), of course, and he’s also remembered today for performances in 1930s pictures like Grand Hotel (1932), Dinner at Eight (1933), Captains Courageous (1937), and You Can’t Take It with You (1938), but it’s quite a change of pace to see him in The Devil Doll. His character, Paul, is a man driven by revenge but not really a villain, as he recognizes that his quest for vengeance blackens his soul in spite of his original innocence. The only people Paul actively harms are the bankers who wronged him, but he doesn’t stop Marcel and Malita from shrinking their servant, Lachna (Grace Ford), and he uses the tiny woman as a weapon against his enemies. Barrymore nimbly performs this morally complicated character, brimming with wrath at his foes but softening in the company of his mother and daughter, and he also manages to adopt the persona of Madame Mandelip without making it too over-the-top. He even shows concern for the shrunken Lachna, scolding Malita for carelessness that might injure her, so we know that he still possesses both his sanity and a moral compass, as questionable as both might seem in some of his actions. As his various roles in other films demonstrate, Barrymore can play the villain, the loving patriarch, and the eccentric, but in The Devil Doll he plays all three in one character. It’s very like the roles Lon Chaney played in earlier Tod Browning pictures, although Chaney’s characters leaned further into madness and villainy, and Chaney had died in 1930, leaving Browning to find other options for his final films. Luckily for Browning, Barrymore proved game for this kind of role.

Devil Doll, Maureen O’Sullivan and Frank Lawton
Paul’s daughter, Lorraine (Maureen O’Sullivan), refuses to marry her boyfriend, Toto (Frank Lawton), because of the shame of her father’s supposed crimes.

Barrymore’s performance might be notable for its complexity and relative restraint, but Rafaela Ottiano’s turn as Malita takes the opposite route, with a mad scientist the likes of which actresses rarely get to play, even today. Fans might know her from Grand Hotel (1932) or her memorable appearance as Russian Rita in She Done Him Wrong (1933), and she had supporting roles in dozens of other films between 1924 and her death in 1942. The Devil Doll gives her a big part with lots of great scenes, and Ottiano makes the most of the opportunity. Her Malita embodies an abundance of familiar horror tropes mixed together in one character. She’s equal parts henchwoman, having been the assistant to her husband, and scientist in her own right, carrying on the work during his imprisonment and after his death. She has a physical ailment that requires a crutch, a shock of white hair that predates that of Humphrey Bogart in The Return of Doctor X (1939), and the craziest stare any insane villain could hope to have. While Marcel originally imagined shrinking as a solution to insufficient global resources, Malita has become obsessed with it because of the power it gives her. The miniaturized dogs and people lose their free will and become zombies who only act under the controlling will of their creators. Malita doesn’t express concern for her victims as Paul does, but she delights in making the tiny people dance and bend to her commands. She’s very much a female counterpart to Dr. Pretorius (Ernest Thesiger) in Bride of Frankenstein, and it’s truly entertaining to see Ottiano tackle such an outlandish character.

Devil Doll, Rafaela Ottiano Eyes
Rafaela Ottiano wins the “most obsessed mad scientist” award for her insane stare and dedication to shrinking people as Malita.

For more weird horror from director Tod Browning, see The Unholy Three (1925), The Unknown (1927), and, of course, Freaks (1932). Lionel Barrymore also appears in Browning’s films The Show (1927), West of Zanzibar (1928), and Mark of the Vampire (1935). The idea of shrinking people appears in movies going back to the silent era, and it also features in Dr. Cyclops (1940), The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957), and Fantastic Voyage (1966). You’ll find even more miniaturized people in Innerspace (1987), Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (1989), Downsizing (2017), and the 2026 TV series, The Miniature Wife.

— Jennifer Garlen for Classic Movie Hub

Jennifer Garlen pens our monthly Silver Screen Standards column. You can read all of Jennifer’s Silver Screen Standards articles here.

Jennifer is a former college professor with a PhD in English Literature and a lifelong obsession with film. She writes about classic movies at her blog, Virtual Virago, and presents classic film programs for lifetime learning groups and retirement communities. She’s the author of Beyond Casablanca: 100 Classic Movies Worth Watching and its sequel, Beyond Casablanca II: 101 Classic Movies Worth Watching, and she is also the co-editor of two books about the works of Jim Henson.

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Western RoundUp: California Gold Country Western Locations

California Gold Country Western Locations

From Iverson Ranch to Lone Pine, Moab to Kanab, Corriganville to Pioneertown, I love visiting Western movie locations!

This spring a road trip took us to California’s “Gold Country.” 

StJamesSonora Western Film Locations
St. James Church, Sonora

We spent a day in the little towns of Sonora — its famous “red church” is seen above — Columbia, and Jamestown. 

RailtownSign Western Film Locations
Railtown 1897 State Historic Park

Western movies were filmed all over the area, and Jamestown and Columbia have particularly interesting movie locations to visit.

Jamestown1 Western Film Locations
Jamestown, CA,  home of Railtown

Railtown 1897 State Historic Park, a frequently used movie location since the 1920s, is located in Jamestown and welcomes visitors. 

RailtownPlaque Western Film Locations

Railtown is home to the Sierra Railway

SierraRailway Western Film Locations

…and its famous Engine No. 3, which is said to be “the most frequently filmed locomotive in the world.”  (That’s my husband waving at the camera.) 

RailtownEngine3 Western Film Locations
Engine No. 3

Although the engine is sometimes “dressed” for specific periods, its familiar No. 3 can be spotted in many films. Just the other day my husband was watching a Western and called me in for a look at Engine No. 3!  It’s pictured on these park brochures.

RailtownBrochures Western Film Locations

There’s a small museum which details some of the railroad’s movie history. 

RailtownMuseum1 Western Film Locations

Among the many films shot at Railtown were The Virginian (1929), Sierra Passage (1950), The Cimarron Kid (1952), Kansas Pacific (1953), The Return of Jack Slade (1955), The Big Land (1957), Man of the West (1958), and The Long Riders (1980).  That list is just a small handful of the movie and TV titles shot there over nearly a century.

RailtownMuseum2 Western Film Locations

The museum includes a poster for one of the most famous movies filmed at Railtown, High Noon (1952).

RailtownHighNoonPoster Western Film Locations

There’s a dusty roundhouse which holds several more train engines and passenger cars.

RailtownRoundhouse1 Western Film Locations
RailtownRoundhouse2 Western Film Locations

We took a Sierra Railway train trip which lasted a little under an hour…

…and saw scenery which has appeared in countless Westerns!

RailtownEngine3Trip Western Film Locations
RailtownEngine3Trip2 Western Film Locations

From Railtown we went on to nearby Columbia State Historic Park.  Columbia was a Gold Rush town whose authentic Western streets later appeared in many movies and TV shows.

ColumbiaMap Western Film Locations
Columbia State Historic Park

That’s my husband Doug beginning our exploration of Columbia; he’s holding a sheaf of screen shots he put together from movies filmed in the town.

Columbia1 Western Film Locations

There’s plenty of Western atmosphere in town, including a stagecoach.

ColumbiaStagecoach Western Film Locations

Using the screenshots my husband had prepared, we were able to find Columbia locations for a handful of movies, including the Hopalong Cassidy film Rustlers’ Valley (1937) and the Randolph Scott film Rage at Dawn (1955). Rage at Dawn also filmed a robbery sequence on the Sierra Railway.

Below are a couple of the locations we found for Rustlers’ Valley. Hoppy was here!

RustlersValleyA Western Film Locations
RustlersValleyA1 Western Film Locations
RustlersValleyB Western Film Locations
RustlersValleyB1 Western Film Locations

These are some of the buildings we found which appear in Rage at Dawn. I’ve included our rough-looking screenshots for comparison.

RageatDawnA1 Western Locations
RageatDawnA2 Western Film Locations
RageatDawnB1 Western Film Locations
RageatDawnB2 Western Film Locations

This was my first visit to this part of the state, and I hope there will be many more such trips in the future.

The photographs accompanying this article are from the author’s personal collection.

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

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Silents Are Golden: Georges Méliès Amongst The Stars

Georges Méliès Amongst The Stars

Mankind dreamed of going to the moon and flying through the stars long before the actual rocket ships were invented. And at the turn of the 20th century, these dreams had a distinct tinge of Victorian whimsy. Poetry, fantasy stories, and the popular stage traditions of musical extravaganzas and “fairy plays”–which often emphasized spectacle rather than storylines–would directly influence some of our earliest science fiction films. And what better examples could there be than the films of George Méliès?

Starting in the late 1890s, Méliès made several motion pictures involving either trips to outer space or fanciful depictions of the stars and planets. With their charming hand-painted sets, careful in-camera effects and hand-operated props, they contain some of the most iconic imagery of the earliest years of cinema.


The Astronomer’s Dream (1898)

Georges Méliès - The Astronomer’s Dream (1898)

After becoming enraptured by motion pictures while attending one of the Lumière brothers’ famed 1895 showings in Paris, Georges Méliès soon became a filmmaker himself. Starting in 1896, he began incorporating his own films into his Paris stage shows. These were very brief an heavy on simple special effects, such as stopping and restarting the camera to make characters disappear or transform at will.

Soon Méliès was experimenting with longer, more elaborate stories, starting with The Haunted Castle (1896) and the lost The Laboratory of Mephistopheles (1897). The Astronomer’s Dream (1898) was the third of these lengthier films, running about three minutes long today.

In the film, which is apparently set in a vaguely-medieval era, we see a bearded astronomer (played by Méliès himself) studying his books. He’s in his castle-like observatory complete with a gigantic telescope, all brought to life through the magic of trompe-l’œil painting. The devil appears in a puff of smoke, but then a moon goddess (which may be Diana) appears and banishes him. Struck by inspiration, the astronomer draws a globe and the moon on the board, but to his surprise the drawings start coming to life. When he attempts to study the moon through the telescope it appears in his observatory as a giant grinning face–and eats the telescope! Other oddities keep occurring, culminating with the reappearances of the devil, the moon goddess who defeats him once and for all, and the grinning oversized moon. 

The Astronomer’s Dream was based on a sketch Méliès created for his stage magic show. Apparently the original print divided it into three parts: 1) L’observatoire; 2) La Lune; and 3) Phœbé. “Phoebe” was one of the Greek goddesses and her name was sometimes used as an epithet for moon goddesses like Diana. Méliès, along with other artists and filmmakers at the time, often incorporated mythological references into their work, and audiences would’ve been very familiar with them.


A Trip to the Moon (1902)

Georges Méliès - A Trip to the Moon (1902)

Méliès’s most famous film as well as one of the most famous films of all time, the roughly fifteen-minute A Trip to the Moon followed the adventures of several scientists as they embarked on a rocket expedition to the moon–a grinning, blinking, papier-mâché moon, to be precise. To audiences at the time, “the moon” didn’t merely have to be a rocky orb but a poetic concept, an unattainable dreamworld where any strange landscape or fantastical creature could be possible. Thus, Méliès’s scientists (named Professor Barbenfouillis, Nostradamus, Alcofrisbas, Omega, Micromegas, and Parafaragaramus, if you’d like to know) find a magical forest of giant mushrooms, encounter a race of alien beings (called the Selenites), and see the stars and planets visualized as beautiful women. Original prints were beautifully hand-tinted, bringing out the details of each set’s elaborate compositions.

Today, with its aliens and its stubby rocket ship, A Trip to the Moon is usually given the title of “first science fiction film.” While technically other space-themed films came first, Méliès did hit a kind of artistic jackpot with this short, creating images that stick with us while dozens of others from 1900s films can fade.


The Merry Frolics of Satan (1906)

Georges Méliès - The Merry Frolics of Satan (1906) copy

This modern-at-the-time take on the Mephistopheles legend follows the comic story of engineer William Crackford and his assistant, who are planning a trip around the world. They’re invited to the laboratory of Alcofrisbas, who has the power to move and transform objects. Alcofrisbas cooks up some magical pills that grant wishes when you hurl them to the floor, and Crackford gets so excited that he signs a contract for the pills immediately. Naturally it turns out that he’s sold his soul to Mephistopheles (who is of course played by Méliès himself). The Merry Frolics of Satan is the English title, but the original French title literally translated as The 400 Tricks of the Devil.

Unabashed, Crackford and his assistant head out on their excursion in a magical train. They encounter Mephistopheles again and flee in a horse and buggy, but it gets transformed into an “infernal carriage” pulled by a strange, skeletal horse represented by a whimsical giant puppet. They’re chased to the summit of a volcano where an eruption blows their carriage into space, and they continue their bizarre journey among brilliantly-colored stars and planets. Even more dreamlike than A Trip to the Moon, Merry Frolics was apparently intended to be part of a stage play, Les Pilules du diable, which explains at least some of its fearless use of whimsey.


Eclipse: The Courtship of the Sun and Moon (1907)

Georges Méliès - Eclipse- The Courtship of the Sun and Moon (1907)

In 1907 Méliès blended whimsey with a surprising bit of naughtiness to give his take on a scientific phenomenon. At least some scenes were apparently filmed for a Paris cabaret. We see a group of rather stuffy medieval astronomers, individual telescopes in hand, gather in a castle to watch a solar eclipse. The sun is shown as a grinning, devil-like face, while the moon is a “dainty Diana,” as film catalogues would describe. The sun and moon are shown sliding closer and closer, making suggestive winks and even licking their lips, until the sun slips behind the moon. More goofy, naughty expressions ensue.

Following the eclipse we’re treated to visions of the stars, visualized as mythological figures and beautiful women, a highlight being the well-known shot of a comet portrayed by actress Mademoiselle Bodson. The sight of all these wonders excite one of the astronomers so much that he topples out of the castle, landing in a fortunately-placed rain barrel.

These little, supposedly more “primitive” Méliès films were all a long way from today’s technical space expedition films or detailed fantasy worlds. Yet unlike more than a few of these modern special effects extravaganzas, their imaginative imagery has managed to endure.

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Noir Nook: Stranger than Fiction – Part 2 (Leon Ames and Ruth Roman)

Stranger than Fiction – Part 2
(Leon Ames and Ruth Roman)

“Truth is stranger than fiction,” Mark Twain once informed us, “but it is because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities. Truth isn’t.” 

This month’s Noir Nook serves up the next installment in my series that looks at “stranger than fiction” lives of actors and actresses from the noir era. This time around, I’m taking a look at two performers: Leon Ames and Ruth Roman.


Leon Ames

When you think of Leon Ames, do you envision the authoritative patriarch of the Smith clan in Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)? Or maybe Doris Day’s father in On Moonlight Bay (1951) and By the Light of the Silvery Moon (1953)? Not me. In my book, Ames’s standout roles were the calculating attorneys he played in two first-rate noirs, The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) and Angel Face (1953). He also contributed memorably to three additional films from the era: Lady in the Lake (1947), The Velvet Touch (1948), and Scene of the Crime (1949).

The Postman Always Rings Twice, Leon Ames and Hume Cronyn
The Postman Always Rings Twice, Leon Ames and Hume Cronyn

Away from the silver screen, Ames opened a Studio City Ford dealership in the mid-1940s that he later expanded into one of the largest automobile franchises in the west. It was this successful business that indirectly led to the actor’s real-life stranger than fiction encounter.

The incident began on the morning of February 12, 1964, when 21-year-old Lynn Wayne Benner – later described as handsome and “cool as a cucumber” – forced his way inside the Ames home, held the actor and his wife, Christine, at gunpoint, and demanded $50,000. Also held captive was a houseguest, Herbert Baumgarteker, who was visiting the Ames family. Ames later told reporters that he pretended to be sick, planning to try and grab Benner’s gun, but “then I realized that was silly.”

Instead, Ames played it safe and contacted Ralph Williams, the manager of his Encino dealership, instructing his employee to bring the money to his home. While they were waiting for Williams to arrive, Ames later recalled, Benner “drank six cups of coffee and he smoked all my cigarettes. [And my] bulldog just sat there licking the guy’s hands.”

Leon Ames Robbery

When Williams arrived with the money, Ames was bound with surgical tape and Benner locked Benner and Baumbarteker in the trunk of Ames’s car. Benner then drove off in his own car, with Christine Ames as a hostage. But he didn’t get far. Before arriving with the cash, Williams had tipped off a bank manager, who’d notified police, and Benner was stopped by police just a few blocks from the Ames house. Also arrested was Benner’s wife, Patricia Louise, who was waiting in a car nearby. In the vehicle with her was the Benners’s three-year-old daughter.

“I was frightened,” Christine Ames said later. “When he saw the police closing in, he pushed the gun into my side. I said, ‘Please don’t do that.’ He dropped it and put his hands up. . . . He didn’t look like the type at all. I told him so.”

Benner later pleaded guilty to the robbery-kidnapping and was sentenced to life in prison. His probation report indicated that Ames and his wife had promised to communicate with Benner in prison “in order to encourage him to become a useful citizen.”

By the way, a few hours after the traumatic incident came to an end, Leon Ames was able to make light of his experience, telling the press: “I’ve played a lot of these parts before.”


Ruth Roman

In the shadowy realm of noir, Ruth Roman is probably best known for her role as Farley Granger’s fiancée in Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train (1951), and the distaff half of a murderous married couple in The Window (1949). She also left her mark in several other noirs, including the Bette Davis starrer Beyond the Forest (1949) and Tomorrow is Another Day (1951).

Strangers on a Train, Ruth Roman
Strangers on a Train, Ruth Roman

But in the summer of 1956, Roman was on the pages of newspapers nationwide for more than just reviews for her movie performances. In July, she was traveling from Italy with her three-year-old son, Dickie, via the SS Andrea Doria luxury liner. On the evening of July 25th, Dickie was in bed in the family’s stateroom and Roman was reportedly dancing in the ship’s first-class lounge as the ship sailed through a thick fog. Suddenly, Roman later recalled, she “heard a big explosion, like a firecracker.” But it was no firecracker. The sound she heard was caused by a collision between the Andrea Doria and the MS Stockholm off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts. The Stockholm struck the Andrea Doria on its starboard side, causing the ship to list heavily and rendering many of its lifeboats inaccessible.  

Seeing smoke coming from the area near her cabin, Roman removed her high heels and found her way to her son, telling him that they were going on a picnic. Meanwhile, numerous boats and ships headed for the area to assist, including a United Fruit freighter, a Navy transport, and the SS Ile de France. With rescue efforts underway, Dickie was lowered into a lifeboat by a seaman, and Roman began climbing down a rope ladder – but when she was only halfway down, her son’s lifeboat pulled away. She was put on another lifeboat and wound up on the nearby Ile de France, while Dickie was taken to the Stockholm. The mother and son were reunited in New York; a total of 46 passengers and five crew died aboard the Andrea Doria – Roman and Dickie were among the 760 survivors.

Ruth Roman reunited with her son Dickie
Ruth Roman reunited with her son Dickie

And despite her frightening experience, Roman didn’t avoid shipboard travel – just four months later, she was aboard a Norwegian freighter called the Beranger, travelling with her soon-to-be husband, talent agent Bud Moss.

Stay tuned for the next entry in the Noir Nook’s look at noir performers with lives that were Stranger Than Fiction!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
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