Welcome to BlogHub: the Best in Veteran and Emerging Classic Movie Blogs
You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.
72737475767778798081

Dennie Moore was an American film and stage actress

Classic Cinema Gold Posted by Art on Dec 31, 2013

  Dennie Moore (December 31, 1902 – February 22, 1978) was an American film and stage actress who made a career playing secretaries, maids, department store clerks, busybodies, roommates, and wives. Moore will always be remembered as the chatty manicurist who spills the beans to Norma Shearer read more

Lost Film Files #23: Burning Sands (1922)

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Dec 30, 2013

Burning Sands (1922) Status: Missing and presumed lost Another day, another sheik film. It seems that even my beloved Milton Sills was not spared the indignity of appearing in one of these things. Burning Sands was billed as “The Sheik for men” and shared both director and filming loca read more

The Sunbeam (1912) A Silent Film Review

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Dec 29, 2013

An early romantic comedy from D.W. Griffith that centers around a spinster, a bachelor, an orphan and how the trio forms an unlikely family. As sweet as can be. Watch the movies grow up before your eyes. D.W. Griffith’s modern reputation rests on his epics but I don’t think that is the read more

Candice Bergen Remembers George Cukor’s Final Film

Cinematically Insane Posted by Will McKinley on Dec 28, 2013

“He was so much smarter than anyone else,” Candice Bergen said of director George Cukor, the subject of a 50-film retrospective at the Film Society of Lincoln Center continuing through January 7. The 67-year-old actress, a five-time Emmy winner for the CBS sitcom Murphy Brown, took the stage at read more

Lost Film Files #22: The Face in the Dark (1918)

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Dec 24, 2013

The Face in the Dark (1918) Status: Missing and presumed lost Mae Marsh is remembered as one of D.W. Griffith’s most vulnerable actresses. Her tragic roles in The Birth of a Nation and Intolerance have been named again and again as the very essence of the art of pantomime. And yet for all her read more

Stella Maris (1918) A Silent Film Review

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Dec 22, 2013

Mary Pickford tackles two roles in this Dickensian soaper. She is Stella Maris: beautiful, rich, innocent and paralyzed. She is also Unity Blake: plain, penniless, ignored and abused. Both girls love the same man but he is trapped in an abusive marriage. Will true love win? And whose true love? Th read more

2004 Film List

Criterion Blues Posted by Aaron West on Dec 20, 2013

Dec 20 Posted by aaronwest The yearly lists continue. We just finished 2004, then will be going backwards a decade at a time. 1994 should be fun. 2004 was one of the better years for film in the aughts. I found myself removing many movies that could make my top 10 in other years like Shaun of the D read more

2004 Film List

Criterion Blues Posted by Aaron West on Dec 20, 2013

Dec 20 Posted by aaronwest The yearly lists continue. We just finished 2004, then will be going backwards a decade at a time. 1994 should be fun. 2004 was one of the better years for film in the aughts. I found myself removing many movies that could make my top 10 in other years like Shaun of the D read more

2004 Film List

Criterion Blues Posted by Aaron West on Dec 20, 2013

Dec 20 Posted by aaronwest The yearly lists continue. We just finished 2004, then will be going backwards a decade at a time. 1994 should be fun. 2004 was one of the better years for film in the aughts. I found myself removing many movies that could make my top 10 in other years like Shaun of the D read more

National Film Registry Results for 2013!

4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Dec 18, 2013

National Film Registry Results for 2013!

4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Dec 18, 2013

2013 National Film Registry December 18th!

4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Dec 16, 2013

50. Cape Fear (1962) Share this:TwitterFacebookGoogleRedditTumblrLike this:Like Loading... Related read more

A Sad Week for Classic Film Fans

Cinematically Insane Posted by Will McKinley on Dec 16, 2013

Classic movie fans are in mourning today, as five unique performers, each much loved for their contributions to the diverse art of film, have died in the last week. Joan Fontaine, an Oscar winner for Alfred Hitchcock’s SUSPICION (1941) and a nominee for REBECCA (1940) and THE CONSTANT NYMPH (1943), read more

2013 National Film Registry December 18th!

4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Dec 16, 2013

Film Activism: The Dreamlands

The Movie Rat Posted by Bernardo Villela on Dec 15, 2013

During this past 61 Days of Halloween I discovered a new, and great Lovecraft adaptation. It was produced in Germany and titled Die Farbe, or as it is know here The Color Out of Space. Albeit another adaptation of this oft retold tale it has its own slant and a great take. As it turns out that same read more

Here’s The Earliest Known Appearance of Sherlock Holmes On Film – Sherlock Holmes Baffled (1900)

Durnmoose Movie Musings Posted by Michael on Dec 15, 2013

As we approach the return of the world’s greatest detective in one of his latest incarnations – the BBC’s Sherlock, which stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Doctor John Watson – it seems perhaps appropriate to take a look at his earliest film read more

The Lost World (1925) A Silent Film Review

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Dec 15, 2013

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle may be famous for Sherlock but what he really loved writing were rousing adventure tales. The most famous of these concerned Professor Challenger and his intrepid band of explorers who discover dinosaurs in a lost world atop a plateau. Cutting edge stop-motion made the film read more
72737475767778798081



error