Blog Archives

1889-04-16

Charlie Chaplin, a major comic  silent film star and founder of United Artists,   is born on this day in 1889. From childhood, Chaplin seemed to have comic genius,  but his early life was fraught with poverty and hardship. He was working as a stage comic in 1913 when he was recruited for Keystone Studios, and within a few years he became the highest paid actor in movies.  Among hundreds of films were  The Kid (1921), followed by A Woman of Paris (1923), The Gold Rush (1925), and The Circus (1928). In an unusual move for a silent film star, Chaplin refused to make “talkies” when sound technology arrived in the 1930s, instead producing City Lights (1931) and Modern Times (1936) without dialogue (but with music he composed). Chaplin became increasingly political, and his next film, with sound, was  The Great Dictator (1940), which fearlessly satirized Nazi dictator Adolph Hitler, who had (it was said) a “Chaplin” mustache.  Chaplin retired to Switzerland in the 1940s, but the 1960s and 70s saw a new appreciation for his work. He was awarded honorary degrees and   an honorary Academy Award in 1972. He died on Christmas Day, 1977.

1926-04-14

František Daniel, a film director, producer and screenwriter, born this day in 1926. Daniel is best known for developing the sequence paradigm of screenwriting.

1894-04-14

Kinetoscope  viewing first offered  commercially in New York City on this day in 1894.  Edison’s kinetoscope is a device for peep-show viewing of very short films.  It will soon be replaced by the Lumier brothers’  idea of cinema presented to theatrical audiences.

1931-03-14

Alam Ara– the first Indian film with sound — is released on this day 1931  in Mumbai. The title means “The Ornament of the World” and the plot involves a love story between a prince and a gypsy girl. As the first film with audio in India, Alam Ara  generated large enthusiastic crowds around theaters. Director Ardeshir Irani decided to use Hundustani language instead of others, and that choice shaped the future of Bollywood.  Unfortunately, the film was lost, and no copies  survive today. For more see this article at Live History India. 

1910-03-18

Frankenstein  1910 is released in New York on this day in 1910. The film was produced by Thomas Edison’s movie studio in New York.

1895-03-19

First Film of workers  leaving a photo factory in Lyon, France is taken by August and Louis Lumiere on this day in 1895.

2010-03-15

World Day of Muslim Culture, Peace, Dialogue and Film  created in 2010 by Javed Mohammed, a San Francisco bay area based writer-producer and founder of MyFavoriteReview who proclaimed the day and week of March 11 each year as a special observance to share and discuss Muslim culture. The goal of the week according to the Pakistan Times is to use culture, art, and film to create bridges and dialogue of understanding.[

1908-02-26

Tex Avery, cartoonist, is born on this day in 1908.

1900-02-22


Luis Buñuel,
a major Spanish-Mexican film director, is born on this day in 1900. His first film, made with artist Salvadore Dali —   Un Chien Andalou —  was called “the most famous short film ever made” by critic Roger Ebert, and his last film—made 48 years later—won him Best Director awards from the National Board of Review and the National Society of Film Critics. His second film,  L’Age d’or, was an artistic triumph and a scandal. One critic said it wasan insult to any kind of technical standard [and it] combines, as a public spectacle, the most obscene, disgusting and tasteless incidents. Country, family, and religion are dragged through the mud.”

1933-02-12

Costa Gavras, a Greek-French film director and producer, is born this day in 1933.  Among his many films are  “Z” (1969) and Missing  (1982), both Oscar winners.  Also in the Costa-Gavras filmography are State of Siege (1972)  and Betrayed (1988), and Music Box (1989). These and other films are essentially political statements dealing with issues of law, justice, oppression, violence, and torture