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  2. Silent film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_film

    Silent-film actors emphasized body language and facial expression so that the audience could better understand what an actor was feeling and portraying on screen. Much silent film acting is apt to strike modern-day audiences as simplistic or campy. The melodramatic acting style was in some cases a habit actors transferred from their former ...

  3. Un Chien Andalou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Un_Chien_Andalou

    The film was financed by Buñuel's mother, and shot in Le Havre and at the Billancourt Studios in Paris over a period of ten days in March 1928. [9] It is a black and white, 35 mm, silent film, with a running time of 17 minutes (although some sources state 24 minutes) and a physical length of 430 meters. [10]

  4. Safety Last! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safety_Last!

    Safety Last! is a 1923 American silent romantic-comedy film starring Harold Lloyd. It includes one of the most famous images from the silent-film era: Lloyd clutching the hands of a large clock as he dangles from the outside of a skyscraper above moving traffic. The film was highly successful and critically hailed, and it cemented Lloyd's ...

  5. Silent Movie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_Movie

    Silent Movie is a 1976 American satirical silent comedy film co-written, directed by and starring Mel Brooks, released by 20th Century Fox in summer 1976. The ensemble cast includes Dom DeLuise, Marty Feldman, Bernadette Peters, and Sid Caesar, with cameos by Anne Bancroft, Liza Minnelli, Burt Reynolds, James Caan, Marcel Marceau, and Paul Newman as themselves, and character cameos by Harry ...

  6. Häxan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Häxan

    The movie was produced by Swedish AB Svensk Filmindustri but shot in Denmark in 1920–1921. [4] With Christensen's meticulous recreation of medieval scenes and its lengthy production period, the film was the most expensive Scandinavian silent film ever made at the time, costing nearly two million Swedish kronor. [3]

  7. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cabinet_of_Dr._Caligari

    The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (German: Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari) is a 1920 German silent horror film directed by Robert Wiene and written by Hans Janowitz and Carl Mayer.The quintessential work of early German Expressionist cinema, [3] it tells the story of an insane hypnotist (Werner Krauss) who uses a brainwashed somnambulist (Conrad Veidt) to commit murders.

  8. Intertitle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intertitle

    The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) used stylised intertitles Cinema etiquette title card (c. 1912). In films and videos, an intertitle, also known as a title card, is a piece of filmed, printed text edited into the midst of (hence, inter-) the photographed action at various points.

  9. Classical Hollywood cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Hollywood_cinema

    Film classic Gone with the Wind (1939) starring Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh. Classical Hollywood cinema is a term used in film criticism to describe both a narrative and visual style of filmmaking that first developed in the 1910s to 1920s during the later years of the silent film era.