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Old 12-18-2017, 05:36 PM   #4541
CouncilSpectre CouncilSpectre is offline
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Sad to say, Shooting Stars is still on my 'to watch' pile.

Thanks for taking the time to share your experience. Seems I might have to move it further up the pile!

Varieté is a wonderful movie.
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Old 12-18-2017, 09:00 PM   #4542
Aclea Aclea is offline
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Originally Posted by billy pilgrim View Post
Surprisingly, this film felt very modern to me, as if this was a recent production about a film studio in the 1920's. The camera work is great, with long, complicated tracking shots and use of shadows. PQ is beautiful on this transfer to my untrained eyes. For a film that was made about 90 years ago, it's truly amazing.

Truly a rare find, a clever piece of writing with real suspense and a gentle comic wit that had me laughing out loud throughout. Masterfully directed by
Anthony Asquith and A. V. Bramble which is paired with a truly remarkable screenplay by Asquith and Jon Orton.

And that ending....Wow! Perfect.

...If you're looking for a modern feeling silent film with gentle comedy, great camera work, and real suspense; a film which is funny, yet bittersweet, then please take a chance on Shooting Stars.

Highest recommendation.
Welcome to the club.







Despite its outrageous plot – a silent star plans to kill her husband and co-star during the shooting of a Western so that she can be with the knockabout comedian she loves without damaging her career - Shooting Stars isn’t really a comedy. Parts of it are funny, and Anthony Asquith’s script certainly takes plenty of satirical swipes at the industry he was trying to break into, but it’s really more of a drama that turns into a tragedy in very different ways than you might expect.

Mae Feather (Annette Benson), the ‘Sunshine Girl,’ is the archetypal silent leading lady, beloved by all she meets, a lover of Shakespeare and all creatures furry and winged – well, except for the crew of her films who despise her and the dove she shares a scene with who shows itself an excellent judge of character by pecking at her. In fact the only two people who love her are husband Julian Gordon (Brian Aherne) and, unbeknownst to him, Ben Turpin-like (minus the wild eyes) comedian Andy Wilkes (Donald Calthrop), and in Julian’s case it’s not the real Mae he’s in love with but the sweet and loving version she plays in all her films: indeed, while she’s with her lover, he’s in the cinema across the road watching her onscreen and utterly enraptured. Yet at the same time he knows that his real life doesn’t quite match up, sighing, “I wish life was more like the movies.” Ironically it’s part of maintaining the illusion of that movie image that puts him in harm’s way: because the ‘morals clause’ in both her and Calthrop’s contracts could end their careers and hopes of a move to Hollywood if either were involved in divorce or scandal, murder is the only way they can be together – though it’s only Benson who wants it enough to go that far, and even her resolve is shaky. Not that Wilkes is in any way admirable: he takes real delight in incorporating the key to his lover’s flat into one of his films (complete with future star Chili Bouchier as the married bathing beauty his onscreen lecher has his eye on).

The behind the scenes look at a working silent studio is a big selling point of the film, from the split level studio (Westerns downstairs, comedy upstairs) revealed in a lengthy overhead crane shot and the phoney press interviews to the backstage *****ing and some convincing scenes of Wilkes workshopping his routines in a way that had largely gone out of fashion by the time the film was released in 1928 (the main body of the film turns out to be set several years before). It’s certainly more convincingly naturalistic than more traditional movies about movies like Show People: while a few try to live their dreams, for most it’s just a job, and not a very interesting one at that.

There is one major credibility problem with a key revelation depending entirely on Benson completely forgetting that Aherne is in the same flat at the wrong moment and for all the claims that Asquith’s scenario was so flawlessly worked out that the credited director was a mere technician carrying out his wishes to the letter there are sections that feel technically accomplished but don’t quite work as well as they could due to some sedate pacing. And, like many behind the screens stories, Wilkes is never as funny as everyone seems to find him: Calthrop is good as the actor but he’s not a natural comedian, and it shows. Aherne, however, is a surprisingly convincing silent cowboy, with a wistful sadness to his young good looks while Benson manages to avoid entirely demonising her shallow character and there’s some real power to her final scenes, by which time we’ve had an impromptu funeral parade and one major character has suffered an even worse fate than death: old movie stars never die, they just become obscure trivia questions, and it’s the film’s extended epilogue set several years later that is actually the film’s most powerful and memorable section. You know exactly where it’s going and how, but the inevitability of it only makes it more poignant.



There’s also another comment on the nature of celebrity and lasting reputation in the way the film is now constantly described as Anthony Asquith’s debut not merely as a writer but as a director: yet he didn’t direct the film, veteran actor-director A.V. Bramble did. But Bramble wasn’t a celebrity and didn’t go on to greater things so everything that is good about the film is ascribed to Asquith while Bramble is curtly dismissed as a mere supervisor working from a detailed script that must have precluded any possibility of his own individuality or imagination finding its way into the film. And yet, while it does feature many of his trademark shots, at times the style and look is markedly different from Asquith’s silents: the ideas may have been Asquith’s but it seems obvious that the same wasn’t always true of the execution. Nor was Asquith the only writer – he shares a credit with John Orton (as J.O.C. Orton), who, like Bramble, failed to go on to better things and so is casually disregarded as barely worth discussing. It’s all too easy to think of Bramble and Orton also being lost in the shadows of the film’s final shot and hard not to wonder who would have got the credit if Asquith’s career had fizzled out in later years and the auteur theory were not so ruthlessly backdated.

For all that, it’s a fascinating film that gains in real emotional power as it progresses – just don’t expect a comedy.

The BFI’s Blu-ray/DVD combo sadly doesn’t boast as good picture quality as their release of his subsequent silent feature Underground, presumably because they didn’t have as good materials to work with. While the picture quality is certainly good, it’s often very flat with not much in the way of depth. But there’s an abundance of extras in the form of newsreel clips and shorts with an emphasis on beauty contests studios ran to find new talent - Pathé’s Screen Beauty Competition, Around the Town – British Film Stars and Studios, The Lovely Hundred and Opening of British Instructional Film Studio (mostly an interminable shot of workers crossing a field to the entrance with very little footage inside the studio itself) and short films Secrets of a World Industry – The Making of Cinematograph Film, Meet Jackie Coogan and Starlings of the Silver Screen – a stills and pressbook gallery and booklet.

The BFI also has a couple of other good Asquith silents, although only one on BD:



‘The “Underground” of the Great Metropolis of the British Empire, with its teeming multitudes of ‘all sorts and conditions of men,’ contributes its share of light and shade, romance and tragedy and all those things that go to make up what we call ‘life.’ So in the “Underground” is set our story of ordinary work-a-day people whose names are just Nell, Bill, Kate and Bert.’

He may have become better known for his adaptations of stage plays and ended his career making glossy pictures about glamorous people as befits the son of a distinguished Prime Minister, but Anthony Asquith’s early work was considerably more down to Earth, or rather distinctly Underground, his terrific 1928 silent film (his first directorial credit) dealing with a beautiful observed romantic triangle between three working class people whose paths cross on the London Underground system. Beginning as an observational comedy filled with all the behavioural traits that Londoners still slavishly adhere to on the Tube to this day, for much of the film it’s a traditional tale of romantic rivalry, with Cyril McLaglen’s power worker setting his cap at shopgirl Elissa Landi but merely annoying her with his boorish bravado on the train and finding himself out of the running when she meets cute with Brian Aherne’s porter on the escalator. Nothing especially novel or exciting happens, with the emphasis on the everyday, but it’s all so hugely enjoyable and good natured that it’s a real surprise when things take a much darker turn as McLaglen (yes, Victor’s brother) enlists his still devoted ex Norah Baring to break up the lovers, with disastrous results…

Despite seeming a tricky proposition to pull off, the shift in tone and genre is executed so well that it never feels jarring but rather a natural consequence of events: it’s a mundane, petty enough revenge to convince even as its consequences spiral out of control. That’s in no small part because Asquith never patronises his characters or stereotypes them because of their background – indeed, they and their world are so convincing you’d never guess the lifelong socialist was brought up in such a rarefied social circle (seen in interview footage Asquith almost sounded like a parody of the awfully, awfully nice awfully, awfully posh). He has a great eye for places and faces (a couple of which in the pub scene could pass for Alfie Bass and Victoria Wood’s grandparents) and his direction has all has the energy of a young man’s film, whether the camera is frantically following a dropped parcel as it falls down the escalator or finding moments of visual grandeur in the everyday (there’s a particularly magnificent establishing shot of the pub interior in the darts scene).



More than that, the film is constantly alive. Asquith’s sound films would become increasingly performance and dialogue-led, earning him a somewhat undeserved reputation as a staid, establishment filmmaker, but his silent work is very different – so different that you’d be forgiven for assuming the young tyro behind the camera was a completely different person. He not only knows just how to move a camera (and parts of the film really move) but more importantly when to move it depending on whether a scene needs a burst of energy or an emotional revelation. And it’s very emotional filmmaking at times: when Baring’s mind finally snaps completely outside the power station, the camera breaks loose with her as she loses herself, while the final extended chase sequence is one of the best action scenes in silent cinema.

All in all it’s a fantastic piece of filmmaking and a fantastic film: the two don’t always go together, but they genuinely do here.

Long only available in a badly water damaged print, the BFI’s Blu-ray/DVD combo release is an excellent transfer taken from two different sources that looks strikingly good and befits from an excellent score by Neil Brand (there’s the option of an alternate, more modern score by Chris Watson, but Brand’s is the more effectively appropriate). A good selection of extras includes a brief newsreel clip of the young Asquith watching early planes with his father and a selection of shorts and newsreels about the Underground system (most of the latter only included on the DVD version), a featurette on the restoration and a booklet. Very highly recommended.



Although the last of his silent features, the restoration of Anthony Asquith’s A Cottage on Dartmoor was something of a bolt from the blue that caused many to re-evaluate the director’s work. Best-known for dialogue driven stage adaptations, most notably his collaborations with Terence Rattigan, it seemed like the work of a completely different man with a completely different language – not least an incredible sense of movement and an awareness of the visual language of cinema as an alternative to dialogue. The plot is simplicity itself, beginning with an escaped convict (Uno Henning) racing across the moors before breaking in on the cottage of a woman (Norah Baring) and her infant child. No sooner has she recognised him and called his name than we’re back in the past when they both worked in the same salon, he as a barber, she as a manicurist. At first it looks like they might become lovers, even though their first date is thwarted (well, more muted by a deaf resident of her boarding house) and he misinterprets her subsequent signals. Instead she finds herself attracted to Hans Adalbert Schlettow, who keeps on finding excuses to return to the salon for more treatments to see her, inflaming Henning’s jealousy as he stalks them before he ultimately cracks while giving him a shave with a cutthroat razor…

If the story isn’t complicated, the adventurous and articulate filmmaking more than compensates, with Asquith making innovative use of every technique in the silent filmmakers arsenal. Henning’s small talk with his clients is conveyed through montages of the recurring subjects – sports, politics, trivia – while the film’s celebrated cinema sequence is an amazingly ambitious bit of bravura filmmaking. While the pit orchestra put down their instruments and get out their cards and sandwiches and Schlettow and Baring and the audience (a bespectacled Asquith among them) are drawn into one of the new talkies, the flickering light from the screen alternately reveals and hides Henning behind them, the emotion from the unseen film reflected on the faces of the audience as the film and its title become mixed up with Henning’s thwarted fantasies. It’s such a powerful sequence that it tends to overshadow much of what follows – though not that close shave – but it’s worth the price of admission on its own.

Both Henning and Baring (who gets a chance to goof it up a bit in the early scenes) are excellent, though young Ronnie Barker lookalike Schlettow makes for an unlikely winner of her affections, though that unlikeliness helps convincingly fuel Henning’s jealousy. (The combination of genial lifelong socialist Asquith and passionate Nazi activist, propagandist and anti-Semite Schlettow must have made for an interesting atmosphere on the set, and it’s probably largely because of his active role in the Nazi Party that the least interesting of the three leads had the longest and most successful screen career.) The film’s narrower focus and more melodramatic plot ultimately makes it a slightly less satisfying film than Asquith’s previous collaboration with Baring, 1928’s Underground, at times feeling like the technique is compensating for the thinness of the story, but it’s still an impressive late silent that stands in stark contrast to Asquith’s later more soundstagebound work.

Although available on a US DVD from Kino with 90-minute documentary Silent Britain as an extra (the latter available as a separate DVD in the UK from the BFI), the BFI’s UK DVD has a much better transfer. The extras package isn’t as generous but far from negligible: an amusing short wartime information film about the importance of keeping the rush hour buses free for essential workers directed by Asquith and a 15-minute documentary about Asquith made during the shooting of Libel that includes interviews with him, Dirk Bogarde and Olivia De Havilland, as well as a booklet.
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Old 12-18-2017, 09:47 PM   #4543
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Man, Aclea, what a fantastic review! This film was a real find for me.

It took me quite a while to develop a taste for silents. I think it's something that you develop as your tastes mature, at least it was for me. Now I can approach these films with an appreciation of this different, yet fascinating form of communicating a story. The new restorations are a revelation and certainly allow an easier appreciation of this art form.

All that being said, I would never have appreciated these films in my younger years. So, if only in this case, aging can have its (admittedly limited) benefits.
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Old 12-18-2017, 10:23 PM   #4544
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You just need an 'in'.

For me, of all things, it was a music video - OMD's Pandora's Box, inspired by the 1929 Pabst silent of the same name, starring the beautiful Louise Brooks.

Later on there was Lang's masterpiece, Metropolis, and later still, Murnau's Sunrise.

Between Pabst, Lang and Murnau, suffice to say, Weimar cinema completely won me over to silents. But, it all started with that music video.....
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Old 12-18-2017, 11:14 PM   #4545
Aclea Aclea is offline
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Originally Posted by billy pilgrim View Post
Man, Aclea, what a fantastic review!
Aw, shucks...

Quote:
It took me quite a while to develop a taste for silents. I think it's something that you develop as your tastes mature, at least it was for me. Now I can approach these films with an appreciation of this different, yet fascinating form of communicating a story. The new restorations are a revelation and certainly allow an easier appreciation of this art form.

All that being said, I would never have appreciated these films in my younger years. So, if only in this case, aging can have its (admittedly limited) benefits.
As CouncilSpectre notes, it helps to have an in - and for it to be the right in. See the wrong silent film as your first one and it could be disastrous. For example, I saw the weaker of the two 1913 versions of The Last Days of Pompeii the other week, and that's definitely not the place for anyone who has never seen a silent film to start because of the very real possibility they may write off three decades of moviemaking out of hand and never see another as a result. It’s certainly not worthless even if it is of more historical than dramatic interest, but without seeing enough better silent films to put it into its historical context it'll put most people off (and, to be honest, it took me a couple of days to finish). Michael Curtiz's Sodom and Gomorrah and 1922's The Glorious Adventure are also bad places to start.

The one real surprise with Bluray is that it's seen so many good and unexpected silent film restorations emerge. Their artistic quality varies wildly and you do have to be receptive to a different way of storytelling, and for a lot of people, much like foreign language films, that comes with age and seeking out something off the beaten track to break up the formulaic nature of so many modern films.

I was lucky enough to be introduced to many of them through a friend who was old enough to have seen many silent when they were new (including the long lost London After Midnight, which he rated as one of Chaney Sr's worst) and so was able to dispel many of the derogatory clichés most people dismiss the silent era with while I was still young and impressionable. But before I met him it was Kevin Brownlow and David Gill's Hollywood TV series - amazingly given 13 weeks of one hour primetime slots on the UK's most commercial channel and a massive advertising campaign - that was the real eye-opener in showing just how rich and exciting silent film could be when restored and presented properly (the opening sequence hit the nail on the head by comparing the same fire brigade rescue with a version played at the wrong speed with tinkly comic piano scoring and then at the right speed with a full orchestral dramatic score). And it was that series that led to the annual Thames Silents restorations of major films like Napoleon, The Big Parade, Wings, Greed, Flesh and the Devil, The Wind, The Iron Mask, The Crowd, The Chess Player, The Iron Horse and the 1925 Ben-Hur among others, which not only had prestigious screenings with live orchestras but also got TV screenings as a Christmas treat.

Sadly that's a thing of the past now in the UK - in the past couple of years A Message from Mars is the only silent film can think of that got a TV screening, and that on an obscure digital channel - but Bluray has really picked up the slack. It's just a pity my friend is no longer with us to reacquaint himself with so many great silent films that were once completely out of reach.

Last edited by Aclea; 12-18-2017 at 11:36 PM.
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Old 12-18-2017, 11:59 PM   #4546
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I was lucky. My 'in' was the TV compilations of silent films and even though I didn't realise many were at the wrong speed on broadcast, I was fascinated by Harold Lloyd and what turned out to be Safety Last and the clock hanging scene.

Chaplin seemed to be a weekend constant as well.

I was extremely fortunate
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Old 12-19-2017, 10:26 AM   #4547
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Welcome to the club.
[Show spoiler]






Despite its outrageous plot – a silent star plans to kill her husband and co-star during the shooting of a Western so that she can be with the knockabout comedian she loves without damaging her career - Shooting Stars isn’t really a comedy. Parts of it are funny, and Anthony Asquith’s script certainly takes plenty of satirical swipes at the industry he was trying to break into, but it’s really more of a drama that turns into a tragedy in very different ways than you might expect.

Mae Feather (Annette Benson), the ‘Sunshine Girl,’ is the archetypal silent leading lady, beloved by all she meets, a lover of Shakespeare and all creatures furry and winged – well, except for the crew of her films who despise her and the dove she shares a scene with who shows itself an excellent judge of character by pecking at her. In fact the only two people who love her are husband Julian Gordon (Brian Aherne) and, unbeknownst to him, Ben Turpin-like (minus the wild eyes) comedian Andy Wilkes (Donald Calthrop), and in Julian’s case it’s not the real Mae he’s in love with but the sweet and loving version she plays in all her films: indeed, while she’s with her lover, he’s in the cinema across the road watching her onscreen and utterly enraptured. Yet at the same time he knows that his real life doesn’t quite match up, sighing, “I wish life was more like the movies.” Ironically it’s part of maintaining the illusion of that movie image that puts him in harm’s way: because the ‘morals clause’ in both her and Calthrop’s contracts could end their careers and hopes of a move to Hollywood if either were involved in divorce or scandal, murder is the only way they can be together – though it’s only Benson who wants it enough to go that far, and even her resolve is shaky. Not that Wilkes is in any way admirable: he takes real delight in incorporating the key to his lover’s flat into one of his films (complete with future star Chili Bouchier as the married bathing beauty his onscreen lecher has his eye on).

The behind the scenes look at a working silent studio is a big selling point of the film, from the split level studio (Westerns downstairs, comedy upstairs) revealed in a lengthy overhead crane shot and the phoney press interviews to the backstage *****ing and some convincing scenes of Wilkes workshopping his routines in a way that had largely gone out of fashion by the time the film was released in 1928 (the main body of the film turns out to be set several years before). It’s certainly more convincingly naturalistic than more traditional movies about movies like Show People: while a few try to live their dreams, for most it’s just a job, and not a very interesting one at that.

There is one major credibility problem with a key revelation depending entirely on Benson completely forgetting that Aherne is in the same flat at the wrong moment and for all the claims that Asquith’s scenario was so flawlessly worked out that the credited director was a mere technician carrying out his wishes to the letter there are sections that feel technically accomplished but don’t quite work as well as they could due to some sedate pacing. And, like many behind the screens stories, Wilkes is never as funny as everyone seems to find him: Calthrop is good as the actor but he’s not a natural comedian, and it shows. Aherne, however, is a surprisingly convincing silent cowboy, with a wistful sadness to his young good looks while Benson manages to avoid entirely demonising her shallow character and there’s some real power to her final scenes, by which time we’ve had an impromptu funeral parade and one major character has suffered an even worse fate than death: old movie stars never die, they just become obscure trivia questions, and it’s the film’s extended epilogue set several years later that is actually the film’s most powerful and memorable section. You know exactly where it’s going and how, but the inevitability of it only makes it more poignant.



There’s also another comment on the nature of celebrity and lasting reputation in the way the film is now constantly described as Anthony Asquith’s debut not merely as a writer but as a director: yet he didn’t direct the film, veteran actor-director A.V. Bramble did. But Bramble wasn’t a celebrity and didn’t go on to greater things so everything that is good about the film is ascribed to Asquith while Bramble is curtly dismissed as a mere supervisor working from a detailed script that must have precluded any possibility of his own individuality or imagination finding its way into the film. And yet, while it does feature many of his trademark shots, at times the style and look is markedly different from Asquith’s silents: the ideas may have been Asquith’s but it seems obvious that the same wasn’t always true of the execution. Nor was Asquith the only writer – he shares a credit with John Orton (as J.O.C. Orton), who, like Bramble, failed to go on to better things and so is casually disregarded as barely worth discussing. It’s all too easy to think of Bramble and Orton also being lost in the shadows of the film’s final shot and hard not to wonder who would have got the credit if Asquith’s career had fizzled out in later years and the auteur theory were not so ruthlessly backdated.

For all that, it’s a fascinating film that gains in real emotional power as it progresses – just don’t expect a comedy.

The BFI’s Blu-ray/DVD combo sadly doesn’t boast as good picture quality as their release of his subsequent silent feature Underground, presumably because they didn’t have as good materials to work with. While the picture quality is certainly good, it’s often very flat with not much in the way of depth. But there’s an abundance of extras in the form of newsreel clips and shorts with an emphasis on beauty contests studios ran to find new talent - Pathé’s Screen Beauty Competition, Around the Town – British Film Stars and Studios, The Lovely Hundred and Opening of British Instructional Film Studio (mostly an interminable shot of workers crossing a field to the entrance with very little footage inside the studio itself) and short films Secrets of a World Industry – The Making of Cinematograph Film, Meet Jackie Coogan and Starlings of the Silver Screen – a stills and pressbook gallery and booklet.

The BFI also has a couple of other good Asquith silents, although only one on BD:



‘The “Underground” of the Great Metropolis of the British Empire, with its teeming multitudes of ‘all sorts and conditions of men,’ contributes its share of light and shade, romance and tragedy and all those things that go to make up what we call ‘life.’ So in the “Underground” is set our story of ordinary work-a-day people whose names are just Nell, Bill, Kate and Bert.’

He may have become better known for his adaptations of stage plays and ended his career making glossy pictures about glamorous people as befits the son of a distinguished Prime Minister, but Anthony Asquith’s early work was considerably more down to Earth, or rather distinctly Underground, his terrific 1928 silent film (his first directorial credit) dealing with a beautiful observed romantic triangle between three working class people whose paths cross on the London Underground system. Beginning as an observational comedy filled with all the behavioural traits that Londoners still slavishly adhere to on the Tube to this day, for much of the film it’s a traditional tale of romantic rivalry, with Cyril McLaglen’s power worker setting his cap at shopgirl Elissa Landi but merely annoying her with his boorish bravado on the train and finding himself out of the running when she meets cute with Brian Aherne’s porter on the escalator. Nothing especially novel or exciting happens, with the emphasis on the everyday, but it’s all so hugely enjoyable and good natured that it’s a real surprise when things take a much darker turn as McLaglen (yes, Victor’s brother) enlists his still devoted ex Norah Baring to break up the lovers, with disastrous results…

Despite seeming a tricky proposition to pull off, the shift in tone and genre is executed so well that it never feels jarring but rather a natural consequence of events: it’s a mundane, petty enough revenge to convince even as its consequences spiral out of control. That’s in no small part because Asquith never patronises his characters or stereotypes them because of their background – indeed, they and their world are so convincing you’d never guess the lifelong socialist was brought up in such a rarefied social circle (seen in interview footage Asquith almost sounded like a parody of the awfully, awfully nice awfully, awfully posh). He has a great eye for places and faces (a couple of which in the pub scene could pass for Alfie Bass and Victoria Wood’s grandparents) and his direction has all has the energy of a young man’s film, whether the camera is frantically following a dropped parcel as it falls down the escalator or finding moments of visual grandeur in the everyday (there’s a particularly magnificent establishing shot of the pub interior in the darts scene).



More than that, the film is constantly alive. Asquith’s sound films would become increasingly performance and dialogue-led, earning him a somewhat undeserved reputation as a staid, establishment filmmaker, but his silent work is very different – so different that you’d be forgiven for assuming the young tyro behind the camera was a completely different person. He not only knows just how to move a camera (and parts of the film really move) but more importantly when to move it depending on whether a scene needs a burst of energy or an emotional revelation. And it’s very emotional filmmaking at times: when Baring’s mind finally snaps completely outside the power station, the camera breaks loose with her as she loses herself, while the final extended chase sequence is one of the best action scenes in silent cinema.

All in all it’s a fantastic piece of filmmaking and a fantastic film: the two don’t always go together, but they genuinely do here.

Long only available in a badly water damaged print, the BFI’s Blu-ray/DVD combo release is an excellent transfer taken from two different sources that looks strikingly good and befits from an excellent score by Neil Brand (there’s the option of an alternate, more modern score by Chris Watson, but Brand’s is the more effectively appropriate). A good selection of extras includes a brief newsreel clip of the young Asquith watching early planes with his father and a selection of shorts and newsreels about the Underground system (most of the latter only included on the DVD version), a featurette on the restoration and a booklet. Very highly recommended.



Although the last of his silent features, the restoration of Anthony Asquith’s A Cottage on Dartmoor was something of a bolt from the blue that caused many to re-evaluate the director’s work. Best-known for dialogue driven stage adaptations, most notably his collaborations with Terence Rattigan, it seemed like the work of a completely different man with a completely different language – not least an incredible sense of movement and an awareness of the visual language of cinema as an alternative to dialogue. The plot is simplicity itself, beginning with an escaped convict (Uno Henning) racing across the moors before breaking in on the cottage of a woman (Norah Baring) and her infant child. No sooner has she recognised him and called his name than we’re back in the past when they both worked in the same salon, he as a barber, she as a manicurist. At first it looks like they might become lovers, even though their first date is thwarted (well, more muted by a deaf resident of her boarding house) and he misinterprets her subsequent signals. Instead she finds herself attracted to Hans Adalbert Schlettow, who keeps on finding excuses to return to the salon for more treatments to see her, inflaming Henning’s jealousy as he stalks them before he ultimately cracks while giving him a shave with a cutthroat razor…

If the story isn’t complicated, the adventurous and articulate filmmaking more than compensates, with Asquith making innovative use of every technique in the silent filmmakers arsenal. Henning’s small talk with his clients is conveyed through montages of the recurring subjects – sports, politics, trivia – while the film’s celebrated cinema sequence is an amazingly ambitious bit of bravura filmmaking. While the pit orchestra put down their instruments and get out their cards and sandwiches and Schlettow and Baring and the audience (a bespectacled Asquith among them) are drawn into one of the new talkies, the flickering light from the screen alternately reveals and hides Henning behind them, the emotion from the unseen film reflected on the faces of the audience as the film and its title become mixed up with Henning’s thwarted fantasies. It’s such a powerful sequence that it tends to overshadow much of what follows – though not that close shave – but it’s worth the price of admission on its own.

Both Henning and Baring (who gets a chance to goof it up a bit in the early scenes) are excellent, though young Ronnie Barker lookalike Schlettow makes for an unlikely winner of her affections, though that unlikeliness helps convincingly fuel Henning’s jealousy. (The combination of genial lifelong socialist Asquith and passionate Nazi activist, propagandist and anti-Semite Schlettow must have made for an interesting atmosphere on the set, and it’s probably largely because of his active role in the Nazi Party that the least interesting of the three leads had the longest and most successful screen career.) The film’s narrower focus and more melodramatic plot ultimately makes it a slightly less satisfying film than Asquith’s previous collaboration with Baring, 1928’s Underground, at times feeling like the technique is compensating for the thinness of the story, but it’s still an impressive late silent that stands in stark contrast to Asquith’s later more soundstagebound work.

Although available on a US DVD from Kino with 90-minute documentary Silent Britain as an extra (the latter available as a separate DVD in the UK from the BFI), the BFI’s UK DVD has a much better transfer. The extras package isn’t as generous but far from negligible: an amusing short wartime information film about the importance of keeping the rush hour buses free for essential workers directed by Asquith and a 15-minute documentary about Asquith made during the shooting of Libel that includes interviews with him, Dirk Bogarde and Olivia De Havilland, as well as a booklet.
A review like this is what makes the forums worth visiting
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Old 12-19-2017, 12:19 PM   #4548
CrockettandTubbs CrockettandTubbs is offline
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Originally Posted by ravenus View Post
A review like this is what makes the forums worth visiting
I missed Shooting Stars in HMV's last 5 for £30 BFI offer (that was a while back!), but if it appears again I know what to do

The same goes for Schalcken the Painter: although that's only £9.99 in the bfi shop.
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Old 12-19-2017, 06:10 PM   #4549
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Sadly that's a thing of the past now in the UK - in the past couple of years A Message from Mars is the only silent film can think of that got a TV screening, and that on an obscure digital channel
The last one I know of was only last month - October, on BBC4, no doubt due to the centenary of the Russian Revolution.

Un chien andalou had a BBC4 showing back in April.
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Old 01-03-2018, 12:36 PM   #4550
CrockettandTubbs CrockettandTubbs is offline
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Now in HMV's 2 for £25

Excellent extras by the look of things:

[Show spoiler]Audio commentary with first assistant editor Joe Fordham and film historian Nick Redman

Jimmy Murakami: Non Alien (2010, 77 mins): feature-length documentary about the film's director

Interview with Raymond Briggs (2005, 14 mins): writer Raymond Briggs discusses When the Wind Blows and other works

The Wind and the Bomb (1986, 25 mins): the making-of When the Wind Blows featuring interviews with producer John Coates, director Jimmy T Murakami and writer Raymond Briggs

Protect and Survive (1975, 50 mins): public information film about how to survive in the event of a nuclear attack

Isolated music and effects track

Illustrated booklet with new introduction by Raymond Briggs, an essay by executive producer Iain Harvey, writing by Jez Stewart, Claire Kitson and Bella Todd, and full film credits.
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Old 01-03-2018, 01:06 PM   #4551
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CrockettandTubbs View Post


Now in HMV's 2 for £25

Excellent extras by the look of things:

[Show spoiler]Audio commentary with first assistant editor Joe Fordham and film historian Nick Redman

Jimmy Murakami: Non Alien (2010, 77 mins): feature-length documentary about the film's director

Interview with Raymond Briggs (2005, 14 mins): writer Raymond Briggs discusses When the Wind Blows and other works

The Wind and the Bomb (1986, 25 mins): the making-of When the Wind Blows featuring interviews with producer John Coates, director Jimmy T Murakami and writer Raymond Briggs

Protect and Survive (1975, 50 mins): public information film about how to survive in the event of a nuclear attack

Isolated music and effects track

Illustrated booklet with new introduction by Raymond Briggs, an essay by executive producer Iain Harvey, writing by Jez Stewart, Claire Kitson and Bella Todd, and full film credits.
Exciting stuff! Now I just need another item in the deal to pair it up with.
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Old 01-03-2018, 07:11 PM   #4552
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bargain score!

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Old 01-03-2018, 08:25 PM   #4553
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bargain score!

Did you use any discount/credit on the order? I ordered it for £49.99 and that's what it shows now (but sold-out).
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Old 01-03-2018, 10:31 PM   #4554
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Probably used a 10% off code like me. Mine arrived yesterday from zavvi!
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Old 01-03-2018, 11:12 PM   #4555
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Did you use any discount/credit on the order? I ordered it for £49.99 and that's what it shows now (but sold-out).
all of the zavvi codes i knew of (welcome346 on the uk site, dez12 on the german one) stopped working with dec.31st 23:59, so i created a new e-mail address and with that a new zavvi account (which was done in less than 2 minutes) to use the 10% "welcome" code.

i think i got the last copy in stock, as it went out of stock 5 minutes after i placed my order.
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Old 01-04-2018, 06:57 AM   #4556
Dougling Dougling is offline
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Probably used a 10% off code like me. Mine arrived yesterday from zavvi!
Hmmm... I queried when the one I ordered last month would come and they just cancelled my order and said they couldn't get it from their suppliers. That's not very good customer service. But then, it is Zavvi...
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Old 01-04-2018, 08:22 PM   #4557
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Is the BFI Blu-ray of SHOOTING STARS Region Free? Some of their release are, some are not.
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Old 01-04-2018, 09:20 PM   #4558
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DJANGO View Post
Is the BFI Blu-ray of SHOOTING STARS Region Free? Some of their release are, some are not.
Yes, it is.

The BFI titles I have so far that are region free are:

The Edge of the World
Institute Benjamenta; or, This Dream People Call Human Life
Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary / My Wife's Lodger
Penny Points to Paradise / Let's Go Crazy
Shooting Stars
That Sinking Feeling
Underground
A Zed and Two Noughts
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Old 01-04-2018, 09:55 PM   #4559
DJANGO DJANGO is offline
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Thanks very much. THE INFORMER is also Region Free.
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Old 01-05-2018, 01:58 PM   #4560
Si Parallel Universe Si Parallel Universe is offline
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My copy of Shooting Stars arrived. I'm going to enjoy watching this. Many thanks for the review and recommendation
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