Swedish and Silent Film scottlord5, scottlord4 + 48 more items

maj 30, 2009 av scottlord

scottlord3
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_315tnzt7sgp&invite=g72tvww

Swedish and Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_331gh3xgdf2&invite=gzp5zzd

scottlord23
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_324gpk67tgm&invite=f38rvqr

Google Reader – Inga via scottlord
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_366gddhb5cq&invite=

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_358hhxbc6k4&invite=d6xjdqs

Silent Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_350c7t882hk&invite=d9fpmn3

scottlordgretagarbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_352ffg64whn&invite=57j7wq

Swedish Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_332ckqmckgw&invite=ck5mqrg

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_348dx8×7jc7&invite=g759btw

Victor Sjostrom
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_367c3fn93g6&invite=

scottlord4
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_314d8ckf7df&invite=w6k6c3

Swedish Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_333t8dg6nck&invite=jrghvp

scottlord3
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_319d6rhw9fg&invite=czv9qd5

scottlord: Shared stuff from scott Swedish Film and the Svenska F
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_258dfj4z8cd&invite=406928047

GretaGarbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_340pqq6vt7g&invite=vsv54

Google Reader – scottlord23 via scottlord
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_335fvdqpthj&invite=gbmfztw

scottlord4
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_320trct8ddm&invite=fdndhk2

gretagarbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_336fqwzxjc3&invite=c7h9jd5

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 6a
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_365d275qv7z&invite=

scottlord4
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_317c8tf3nf8&invite=d587gvk

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_351cm3rmvf4&invite=cgc6gfm

Swedish Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_346fphtm2f4&invite=480160080

Swedish Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_345dghh4nfr&invite=csbghjz

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_354g2tn95cn&invite=fvppxvn

Victor Sjostrom
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_345ddv9j6ft&invite=hc29ws8

Victor Sjostrom
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_370cdn6rqhp&invite=213981414

Swedish Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_347gm2rbtwq&invite=cj4hcsb

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_353dhdkhxcv&invite=cmh7c47

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509a
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_355gvprx2dz&invite=

gretagarbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_341hgvnfkhh&invite=c5987v6

Victor Seastrom Victor Sjostrom
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_361d22swtcp&invite=61685610

Google Reader – scottlord23 via scottlord 509
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_338ccz8q4fn&invite=1778943647

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 6
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_364www525f5&invite=dxxb8pj

scottlordgretagarbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_337h5b3s4cb&invite=dttv9s8

Victor Sjostrom, Greta Garbo, Swedish Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_321d8hd52ds&invite=cq8j257

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_360ghvpkjfv&invite=d4×89nk

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_359c2bkqndn&invite=g6hvwrp

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509d
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_356g8kmjngq&invite=gcz7nkp

scottlord5
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_318d2nbx9cr&invite=k75zd7

Google Reader – Import 081005_022228 via scottlord
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_334f3snm748&invite=dhzgh6b

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_357zb5dw5cd&invite=dgwftb5

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet – Google-profil
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_363gg4fwcdh&invite=d5b9zxm

Google Reader – scottlordGreta Garbo Clarence Brown Silent Film -
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_339fbfqd8fw&invite=1106860665

scottlord5
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_313dbv64djb&invite=gd7n8w

scottlordgretagarbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_325dfrq86mm&invite=h9pwb5

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_349cgnhgp7w&invite=d7rph95

Swedish Silent Film
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_344d9qbvrr5&invite=1625522783

Victor Sjostrom
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_362d96t7qc2&invite=8vg8gf

scottlord5
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_316frsktpgt&invite=cfnp6qj

Greta Garbo
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_342jzwhvnc7&invite=1226716050

Swedish and Silent Film Bookmarks, Bookmarks + 264 more items

maj 30, 2009 av scottlord

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_182fx5cp5d3&invite=djn5s8h

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_48grxk4pfh&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_253d53mqxdz&invite=c9xdjpw

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_130ggvqx4fz&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_171gxgrrhcr&invite=d7znx6g

Google Reader – "Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_260hbtqphfj&invite=hrfjpgw

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_229c9g8nsfj&invite=fqshtk2

Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_236gz9zk8fh&invite=fpqm6h5

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: christina lin

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_178×2bkt2hj&invite=f47m5c9

Google Reader

-

"Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet"

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_266c5m4q4g8&invite=cfwfvzq

Swedish and Silent Film social bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_76c2jkx4fg&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_118pcdqm5gq&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_35dq4fgnm6&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film, bloglines

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_78c94sbxhs&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_43jwxp62gz&invite=

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_367c3fn93g6&invite=

scottlord4

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_314d8ckf7df&invite=

Google Reader – Cissi Elwin via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_306cb89795d&invite=1760329470

Google Reader

-

"Finnish Silent Film" via scott Swedish Film an

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_220fj8t7qpg&invite=gvfw3g8

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_239c3bch83s&invite=gkf72xx

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: March 2007

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_198hk2hq4fk&invite=dv3m5xp

Google Reader – "Ingmar Bergman" via scott Swedish Film and the S

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_255fj6p8dd3&invite=dvqnfr5

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: Ingmar Bergma

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_173dzj85whd&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_51gpvfwxgh&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_64fc2rq2fz&invite=

Google Reader – "Ingmar Bergman" via scott Swedish Film and the S

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_254gf5vjbcj&invite=dtq4k69

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_12c65ccm&invite=csqpz6j

Scott Lord: scottlord: Christina Lindberg

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_187fs39tkfj&invite=g76t76z

scottlord4

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_320trct8ddm&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_134ggxm4rd4&invite=

Swedish Film links

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_25gg9r9w&invite=

Shared stuff from scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_217fgf7fbf5&invite=2012619011

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_30d3ptfk&invite=

Google Reader – "Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_262dwzrnwff&invite=5dtgxb

Google Reader

-

scottlord's shared items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_223gxr2dzhj&invite=sfg2wx

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_49ck574tc6&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_252d7zhtqfq&invite=hkvf5wb

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_91cw8p6xd3&invite=

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_370cdn6rqhp&invite=213981414

Ingmar Bergman

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_163dtp2vkfs&invite=

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: Kattorna (The

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_193df74nkdw&invite=fnjpcmq

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509a

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_355gvprx2dz&invite=

gretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_341hgvnfkhh&invite=c5987v6

Swedish and Silent Film social bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_207dtts4rfw&invite=hjfc423

Victor Seastrom Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_361d22swtcp&invite=61685610

del.icio.us Svenska Filminstitutet, Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom,

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_81gnz8gjc8&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_152fgmhvqw9&invite=

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_246dzdp3xc8&invite=fg523n8

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_250gq6xvddj&invite=cs9cmhd

bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_310hprhm5hm&invite=fccbq68

scottlordgretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_337h5b3s4cb&invite=dttv9s8

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_113cgssxnfd&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_164gdxzdbgv&invite=d7fjxhs

Ingmar Bergman

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_102dt762bd9&invite=

Silent Hollywood

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_115ddjrfdvz&invite=

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_211cwnj44sw&invite=gf742p9

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_162hknjrxdr&invite=c87bnq7

Google Reader – Import 081005_022228 via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_334f3snm748&invite=dhzgh6b

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_169hgst3st2&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_150g2k7z3cx&invite=

Swedish Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_87f9r724hk&invite=

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_58gg5pghgz&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_56ft6q37dr&invite=

bookmarks-reader

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_304gxfw64dx&invite=gjqbxcf

scottlord5

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_316frsktpgt&invite=cfnp6qj

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_18cg2gpx&invite=csh63df

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_92hdb3jbmk&invite=

scottlord: scott lord

-

Google Profile

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_291hjbbjzmn&invite=943936217

Google Reader – Silent Greta Garbo via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_311gbpvhvdx&invite=f4zzxwd

Swedish Film and the Svenska Film Institute

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_32cz9rfg&invite=

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_160dwcwprgg&invite=fxghvs

Google Reader

-

"Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet"

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_2636fg9zhmt&invite=8hn6m9

Google Reader – "Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_259gfs7d6ds&invite=g6pdg35

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_61fcwkd4zz&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_358hhxbc6k4&invite=d6xjdqs

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_234gnhkwxg7&invite=nm3hs8

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_245g2zhpchn&invite=fg7pgt5

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_218cbv6g5fx&invite=p4j4dg

Silent Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_350c7t882hk&invite=d9fpmn3

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_135c3wff9cd&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_214g8h9zqcx&invite=5n2hqj

Google Reader – Inga via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_300dfhzbmch&invite=gn2m29s

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_31cxz9vp&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_44d95jj7dw&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_38453vs25d&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_221cr8dt9ds&invite=j9zk3z

scottlord3

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_319d6rhw9fg&invite=czv9qd5

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_235c2xfcxdw&invite=cqf2vn8

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_95fxfsqcdm&invite=

Swedish Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_89d83dqhcn&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Your Twitter Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_290fxct8ndw&invite=fsnptq

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_248f5rx63hf&invite=gsm87pv

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_208dqw2bjcf&invite=xxz4rb

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_65c4sjwzgk&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_189drvq8wgw&invite=fxwh6c7

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_24339vxgtgp&invite=f3mt6hm

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_172fvpfhtgh&invite=jkwwdh

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_1176c8mpmvn&invite=

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_17f33vc5&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_98d49tx3cz&invite=

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_247hrff94gz&invite=gq83f2

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_33dbz72h&invite=

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_232fm87t5dx&invite=hmmnnbf

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: February 2007

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_200cvnxbxdn&invite=fjtftqv

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_251frzbq3cs&invite=grg2nd3

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_46rfmdbqfv&invite=

Google Reader – "Ingmar Bergman" via scott Swedish Film and the S

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_256c8fzjshc&invite=ctmrhhp

scottlord6

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_312fdt8dwcb&invite=g5gtj56

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_360ghvpkjfv&invite=d4×89nk

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509d

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_356g8kmjngq&invite=gcz7nkp

scottlord: Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska F

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_292cq9gp9gv&invite=c8xrrzm

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_107zx5dpdd6&invite=

scottlord5

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_318d2nbx9cr&invite=k75zd7

scottlord: Christina Lindberg

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_183d8b6btcp&invite=g3pzjmz

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_59gxjmrrgw&invite=

Google Reader – "scottlordswedishfilm" via scott Swedish Film and

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_257w5vcrzgw&invite=dw8fbgm

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet – Google-profil

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_363gg4fwcdh&invite=d5b9zxm

Google Reader

-

"Your Email Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_271hrwxxwfb&invite=1195602127

Google Reader

-

"Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet"

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_264hhc5q5cw&invite=gxkt5x

Google Reader

-

"svensk+filmhistoria" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_295g42d63g6&invite=184426059

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_63qrm9zzfd&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_281cv27zwc9&invite=1632075790

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_6gkb59g&invite=

Google Reader – Silent Greta Garbo via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_309gx8tkxnv&invite=ck96wnb

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_140hdfvkqfs&invite=hbghhnn

Google Reader

-

"silentfilm" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_267ft7pqncv&invite=mm872q

Google Reader – Victor Sjostrom via scott Swedish Film and the

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_301c6pt9ngd&invite=1260264

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_158kv4rpng3&invite=

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_155f3cwm4sn&invite=

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_230cp8ptgg4&invite=gdkkckz

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: christina lin

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_1844wm7f4cp&invite=cqr4z2s

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_156czggdbv6&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Your Twitter Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_289gx8q2vfg&invite=36n77z

Swedish and Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_331gh3xgdf2&invite=gzp5zzd

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_15f6bpcf&invite=fbdx6zw

scottlordgretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_352ffg64whn&invite=57j7wq

scottlord -

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_181d6bk74c4&invite=hhsfdzz

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_242djc25xgp&invite=ck9gqvj

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_231csv255fz&invite=2tfsgw

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_332ckqmckgw&invite=ck5mqrg

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_348dx8×7jc7&invite=g759btw

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_62cvxzmkg9&invite=

scott lord

-

Google Profile

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_213c7xhkbpx&invite=ccg96kn

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_75cf2v32fq&invite=

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_122hs3n6nfq&invite=

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_333t8dg6nck&invite=jrghvp

Google Reader – scottlord23 via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_305qbqsmqdn&invite=cc48cx9

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_225dfds5kc8&invite=djbzf89

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_42gzkqkffj&invite=

My Notebook Netherlands

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_10ddq48m&invite=f35×2mb

Greta Garbo: Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_195cpfdxggx&invite=fzqcjxx

Google Reader – Victor Sjostrom via scott Swedish Film and the

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_302f6m422f2&invite=dr3n89f

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_53fvrfsc8x&invite=

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: Marie Liljeda

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_176cmkcssgp&invite=czhq4hx

GretaGarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_340pqq6vt7g&invite=vsv54

Google Reader – scottlord23 via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_335fvdqpthj&invite=gbmfztw

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_165gg3nd3xx&invite=

Greta Garbo: oktober 2008

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_196g4m3qgd6&invite=cr5m3xz

Swedish Film and the Svenska Film Institute

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_29d6v2s6&invite=

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 6a

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_365d275qv7z&invite=

Bookmarks for scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_28fwpdz4&invite=

Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_2867tt75xcx&invite=gtxjjgt

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_351cm3rmvf4&invite=cgc6gfm

Google Reader – Victor Sjostrom via scott Swedish Film and the

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_303fp4xfmf6&invite=ckmj5mp

Google Reader – Silent Greta Garbo via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_298dw6n9kfv&invite=ngzhh3

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_226cmsmwtcf&invite=cfc877m

Google Reader

-

scottlord's shared items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_215gddt8k8n&invite=fcbd4fj

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_244hpmzkgf7&invite=hc867g2

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_21g3sqfx&invite=

Shared stuff from scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_219f2cj3scn&invite=dftmzmn

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_157fcdmjhct&invite=

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_8d85f4t&invite=

Silent Garbo: Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_204mcrns8dw&invite=d74d523

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_241crtw46f2&invite=d89p858

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_96hhhw9pdc&invite=

Victor Sjostrom, Greta Garbo, Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_321d8hd52ds&invite=cq8j257

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_210fx8zjhg2&invite=c3q627m

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_202chrtsrg7&invite=cfpq84

Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_237hhzbxpc5&invite=d9g24b5

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_36g8p953fg&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_359c2bkqndn&invite=g6hvwrp

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: mary pickford

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_185hskb8s45&invite=d5gw34

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_233k8tgr8gs&invite=gmshvrk

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_240cj6bssdn&invite=d577bm6

del.icio.us Svenska Filminstitutet, Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom,

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_153dr6tmkft&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_20hhtb46&invite=

scottlord Svensk Filmhistoria: scottlord- Greta Garbo, Victor Sjo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_179grzn97g6&invite=c6rnwj2

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_357zb5dw5cd&invite=dgwftb5

Swedish and Silent Film, bloglines

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_70cmw695dv&invite=

Google Reader

-

"svenska biografteatern" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_297f24t5bct&invite=c8rtkgz

Google Reader – scottlordGreta Garbo Clarence Brown Silent Film -

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_339fbfqd8fw&invite=1106860665

scottlord5

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_313dbv64djb&invite=gd7n8w

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_344d9qbvrr5&invite=1625522783

feeds

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_151mmxtcjc6&invite=

Swedish Film and the Svenska Film Institute

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_40gfncphfs&invite=

google-reader-scottlord-shared-items_2196

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_308g955q8gq&invite=1226511281

scottlord3

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_315tnzt7sgp&invite=g72tvww

Google Reader

-

"svensk+filmhistoria" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_296fjmnpxdp&invite=c2p333w

Google Reader

-

"Your Twitter Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_288f8×534cc&invite=47625

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_119mxrfxsdx&invite=

scottlord -

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_180chv8p3cd&invite=g7vmvsq

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_159c6cvzrg9&invite=c6j47p3

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: Little Lord F

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_177gtf42qzr&invite=gshgsd7

scottlord23

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_324gpk67tgm&invite=f38rvqr

Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_238dx3dcdfd&invite=fn96rxm

Google Reader – Inga via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_366gddhb5cq&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_21687pffxg2&invite=gjtn2t9

del.icio.us Svenska Filminstitutet, Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom,

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_125g5mpxvc6&invite=

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: Silent 4

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_175fh3tqbd7&invite=gnxgf5q

scottlord: Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_293ggz77mfd&invite=4fr9bd

Silent Hollywood

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_12082936qvw&invite=

scottlord Svensk Filmhistoria: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_174cc85zdfj&invite=791809777

scottlord: Shared stuff from scott Swedish Film and the Svenska F

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_258dfj4z8cd&invite=406928047

Greta Garbo: december 2008

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_197fd5tzqdm&invite=htbzfpr

google-reader-email-subscriptions-via

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_299gnfnn7mp&invite=dd7pf4q

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_249fwvpd9cm&invite=dmt6zpx

gretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_336fqwzxjc3&invite=c7h9jd5

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_192cwg4cxhs&invite=d5cdb7t

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_68hhb7tgf5&invite=

scottlord4

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_317c8tf3nf8&invite=

Ingmar Bergman

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_124cnd27hgc&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_100c8vpsqhh&invite=

Swedish Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_346fphtm2f4&invite=480160080

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_23cz7fww&invite=ckjrjk2

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_345dghh4nfr&invite=csbghjz

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_77cz2b7qc9&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_4c98t9d&invite=c5fbpg2

Google Reader

-

scottlord's shared items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_222dxjrvsc8&invite=hmckkjv

Swedish Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_864vf5g5d6&invite=

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_354g2tn95cn&invite=fvppxvn

Swedish and Silent Film social bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_136fhrwzt7z&invite=d2zjw4n

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_144d9w7scfk&invite=

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_345ddv9j6ft&invite=hc29ws8

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_212g46ggbfr&invite=fqjh5sv

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_138grh2s9c6&invite=gphz5bg

del.icio.us Svenska Filminstitutet, Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom,

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_111gjzw49fz&invite=

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_347gm2rbtwq&invite=cj4hcsb

My Notebook

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_55f6s9vndv&invite=

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_353dhdkhxcv&invite=cmh7c47

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_227dqp8s5fr&invite=ghppc6f

Google Reader – scottlord23 via scottlord 509

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_338ccz8q4fn&invite=1778943647

scottlord: scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: si

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_209fh9wfffd&invite=gs2pzsp

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_167ff3hxdgn&invite=

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 6

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_364www525f5&invite=dxxb8pj

Google Reader – "swedishfilminstitute" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_224hk6v8gcr&invite=fnc2kzh

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_109c5nwx9hm&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_142g5zg3hrn&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_206f769shd2&invite=gdcvcv5

Scott Lord: Google Anteckningsblock Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_188s937n6dm&invite=hc58fcm

My Notebook Svenska Filmhistoria

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_67cpdmwqcg&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_148gm3wdrgt&invite=gm3jmsv

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_83d2fp28j2&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Your Twitter Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_287vhd4n3d5&invite=dqp885p

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_79jb7nkfh&invite=

Silent Hollywood

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_105hbdssgfx&invite=

Scott Lord: AltaVista Søk: Swedish Film Ingmar Bergman Eva Dahlbe

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_186d8fpwd4g&invite=d6tx6p2

del.icio.us Svenska Filminstitutet, Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom,

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_132hb3dtdc5&invite=

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_3cp9zqb&invite=

scottlordgretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_325dfrq86mm&invite=h9pwb5

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_349cgnhgp7w&invite=d7rph95

Google Reader – "Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_261g3zrd8g6&invite=f6q4hpm

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_362d96t7qc2&invite=8vg8gf

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_14cw9g9p&invite=

Swedish Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_84hh6h7fdm&invite=

Google Reader

-

"scottlord–beeplog" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_294dsp6×9rq&invite=j8s68r

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_342jzwhvnc7&invite=1226716050

Greta

maj 28, 2009 av scottlord

I’ve shared a document with you called ”Greta”:
http://docs.google.com/Presentation?id=dhjj8pg6_376dd3f3mgj&invite=850915487

It’s not an attachment — it’s stored online at Google Docs. To open this document, just click the link above.

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

maj 27, 2009 av scottlord

I’ve shared a document with you called ”Greta Garbo”:
http://docs.google.com/Presentation?id=dfxswqzj_1677crbtg5&invite=1427390337

It’s not an attachment — it’s stored online at Google Docs. To open this document, just click the link above.

scottlord3 Swedish Film

maj 25, 2009 av scottlord
Swedish Film InstituteSwedish Film

Swedish Film 1923-1928

Edvin Adolphson directed When Roses Bloom (Na Rosorna sla ut, 1930), starring Sven Garbo. Greta Garbo had visited her brother, Sven Gustafsson while in Stockholm. The film was co-scripted by Gösta Stevens and also stars Swedish actresses Karin Swanstrom, Margita Alfven, and Anna-lisa Baude. Else-Marie Hansen was given her first appearance on the screen with the film. John W. Brunius directed two films that year, botth written by screen writer Pelle Stille, The Two of Us (Vi tva) in which Edvin Adolphson appeared as an actor with Margit Manstad, Marta Ekstrom and Anna-Lisa Froberg, the film having had been being the first film in which the actress was to appear, and The Doctor’s Secret (Doktorns hemlighet) starring Pauline Brunius, Ann-Marie Brunius and Marta Ekstrom. Julius Jaenzon photographed and directed the film Ulla My Ulla (Ulla Min Ulla), the assistant director of the film having been Per-Axel Branner, it having been the first film in which actress Karin Granberg was to appear. Gustaf Bergman directed his first film that year, The Dangerous Game (Den farliga leken), starring Jenny Hasselqvist, Olga Andersson and Elsa Wallin, his also during 1930 having directed Vera Schmiterlow and Anna-Lisa Baude in the film A Woman’s Tommorow (En Kvinnas Morgondag). Swedish cinematographer Harald Berglund in 1930 began filming under the direction of Ragnar Ring on the film Lyckobreven. Gustaf Edgren that year directed the film The Crown’s Cavaliers/ Crown escort (Kronans kavaljerer) with Stina Berg and Lisa Wirstrom in her first appearance on the screen as an actress. In 1930 G?sta Ekman and Stina Berg appeared in the film For Her Sake (For hennes skull) written by Ivar Johansson directed by Paul Merzbach, which also starred Inga Tiblad. In regard to the tradition in Scandinavian filmmaking of incorporating the enviornment into the storyline and the transition from silent film to sound, author Forsyth Hardy looks toward Hollywood to describe For hennes skull only to clarify the technique Gustaf Molander was soon to develop more fully behind the camera, ”The film had little significance beyond its proof that in Sweden, as elsewhere, the microphone wa a cramping influence on the movement natural to the medium.” And yet without mentioning how groundbreaking the films of the period were in the history of the relationship between the screenplay and the shootingscript, now that the photoplay had ended as a form of literature, Hardy continues by noting that during the early sound films photographed by Julius Jaenzon and directed by Victor Sjostrom both had tried to remain faithful to the old medium of silent film and its near precedence of plotline over dialougue by making the use of the microphone less noticeable during the film, possibly giving the new form more value. Paul Merzbach followed in 1931 with the film The False Millionare (Falska Millionaren), starring Fridolf Rhudin, Gunnar Bj?rnstrand and Annalisa Ericson and photgraphed by Elner Akesson. Swedish director John Lindlof contributed the film Den Gamla Garden with Margareta Schöström and Marta Lindlöf during 1931.

Swedish Film Actress Greta GarboSwedish Sphinx

Still photograph from the film Mata Hari scanned from the original negatives and emailed through Yahoo by author Mark A. Vieira. Film clip linked with written permission of www.doctormacro.com

Gustaf Bergman continued in 1931, directing Edvin Adolphson, Inga Tiblad and Karin Swanstr?m in the film Generalen. Gustaf Bergman also that year directed Isa Quensel in her first film appearance on screen, Karlek maste vi ha, with Margit Rosengren, Anna-Lisa Baude and Valborg Hansson and the film En kvinnas morgondag starring Jenny Hasselquist, Elsa Wallin and Olga Andersson. Rune Carlsten in 1931 directed the film Dangerous Paradise (Faroranas Paradis) with Ragnar Arvedson. Carlsten that year appeared in Longing for the Sea (Langten till havet) directed by John W. Brunius. Theodor Berthels in 1931 wrote and directed the film His Majesty Will have to Wait (Hans Majestat far vanta) with Margit Manstad and Ragnar Arvedson. Greta Garbo director Eric Petschler that year directed Guken Cederborg, Greta Anjo and Marta Claesson in the film Flickan fran Varmland. The cinematographer Hilmer Ekdahl photographed his first film in 1931, En karleksnatt vid Oresund, directed by Ragnar Widestedt and S?lve Cederstrand, the first film in which the actress Maritta Marke was to appear. The film also stars Elisabeth Frisk. Per Axel Branner directed Astrid Bodin in her first film during 1931, Under roda fanor, photographed by Gösta Sandin.

Swedish film director Per Lindberg in 1931 established three theaters with actor Gosta Ekman, among them being included Vas-teatern and Konserthusteatern (The Large and Small room). Actor Hasse Ekman was given the play ”Fredja” by Per Lindberg in 1934.

Swedish Film Actress Greta Garbothe Swedish Sphinxthe Swedish Sphinx

Still photograph from the film Inspiration scanned from the original negative and e-mailed through Yahoo by author Mark A. Vieira

After returning to Sweden in hope that it was there that his daughters would be raised, Victor Sj?str?m also returned to the screen in a brief appearance with Swedish film directors Gustaf Molander and Gustav Edgren in the film Motley Leaves/Gaudy Blade (Brokiga Blad) with Lili Ziedner, Edvin Adolphson, G?sta Ekman and Annalisa Ericson. Sj?str?m had appeared in a short beauty contest film, Froken, Ni linknar Greta Garbo (1931), along with Lars Hanson and Karin Molander, both of whom had returned to Sweden, where Eivor Nordstrom was chosen to be the most like Greta Garbo. Its photographer was Ake Dahlquist, its director Per Axel Branner who had been the assistant director to the film, The Markurells of Wadkoping, directed by Victor Sj?str?m. Branner had directed his first film, Tango-foxtrot, in 1930. Victor Sj?str?m’s daughter, Guje Lagerwall (Guje Sj?str?m, Guje Kanter) wrote the screenplays to two Swedish films, Smeder pa luffen (Erik Hampe Faustman, 1949) and Lattjo med Boccaccio (Gosta Bernhard, 1949)- she appeared as an actress in seven films that were made in Sweden. Gustav Molander directed both father and daughter in films that were made in Sweden, Victor Sj?str?m in Love (Karlek, 1952), and Guje Lagerwall in Franskild (1951). Also starring in Molander’s film Franskild were Inga Tiblad, Irma Christensen and Marianne Löfgren.

the Swedish Sphinx

One Night (En natt, 1931) directed by Gustaf Molander and written by Ragnar Hylten-Cavallius owes much of its construction to its assitant director, Gosta Hellstr?m. Hellstr?m had been a film critic who met with both Eisenstien and Pudovkin before returning to Sweden. It is distinct from Molander’s other film in its technique, in its editing. Appearing in the film are Gerda Lundequist, Unno Henning, Sture Lagerwall, Ingert Bjuggren and Karin Swanstr?m. The cinematographer to the film was Ake Dahlquist.

Swedish Film actressthe Swedish Sphinx

Still photographs from the film The Rise and Fall of Susan Lennox scanned from the original negative and e-mailed through Yahoo by author Mark A. Vieira. Film clip linked with written permission from www.doctormacro.com. In a series of photo captions for the negatives that were in fact chosen for publication, author Vieira notes that by the time the portraits for The Fall and Rise of Susan Lennox were shot, Clarence Sinclair Bull had decided to no longer use a soft focus lens to photograph Greta Garbo, although he still used silk-covered softlights for the series.

In 1932, Gunnar Skogland wrote and directed the film Landskamp with Fritiof Billquist, George Blomstedt, Gun Holmquist, Signhild Bjökman and Signe Lundberg-Settergren in her first film as an actress. The cinemaographer to the film was Elner Akesson. Actress Ingrid Bergman has a brief role in the film, as does Corcordia Selander, and yet in her autobiography, My Story, Bergman omits the name of Gunnar Skoglund entirely. Bergman, rather, relates an account of her having been given a screen test with Gustaf Molander. ”I knew an actress named Karin Swanstr?m came into his shop from time to time. She was a fine comedy actress, but now she was the artistic director of Swedish Films”, wrote Bergman. She quotes Karin Swanstr?m as having told her that she would arrange a screen test for her within a week but then abruptly telling Bergman, ”No, wait a minute, I’ll see if I can arrange it now.” It would be Gustaf Molander that would recommend her to Edvin Adolphson until it would later become possible for her to film with him.

Weyler Hildebrand in 1932 directed his first film, Baklaxan, as well as the films Navvies of the Crown (Kronans rallare), Muntra musikanter, starring Ulla Sorbon and Anna Olin and The Southsiders (Soderkakr), starring Sigurd Wallen. Soderkakar was the first film in which actress Rut Holm was to appear. Gosta Rodin directed his first film that year, Tva hjartan och en skuta, starring Birgit Sergelius, it being the first film in which Swedish actress Carin Swensson was to appear. Ragnar Arvedson was the assistant director to the film Modern Wives (Modarna fruar, 1932), written and directed by Edvin Adolphson based on the play written by Algot Sandberg. In 1932, Gustaf Molander directed three films; Black Roses(Svarta rosor), photographed by Ake Dalquist and written by Ragnar Hylten Cavalius, it having starred Einar Axelsson, Karin Swanstrom, Ruth Stevens and Carl Barcklind, We Who Use the Servant’s Entrance (Vi som gar koksvagen), also photographed by Ake Dalqvist while scripted by Tancred Ibsen and starring Tutta Rolf, Karin Swanström, Tollie Zellman, Rene Björling and Rut Holm and Love and Deficit (Karleck ock kassabrist), scripted by G?sta Stevens, which had starred Tutta Rolf, Sigurd Wallen and Edvin Adolphson. It was also the first film in which actress Alice Carlsson was to appear. Jag gifta mig- aldrig, the first film in which Viran Rydkvist was to appear, was brought to the screen that year by director Eric Berglund. In 1932, John Lindlof directed Tva man om en anka, written by Borje Larsson and photographed by Julius Jaenzon. The film stars Tollie Zellmann. Sigurd Wallen in 1932 directed the films The Boys of Storholmen (Pojkarna pa Storholmen) with Margit Manstad, Anna Olin and Ruth Stevens and Lucky Devils (Lyckans gullgossar), the assistant director to the film Ivar Johansson. Gustaf Edgren that year directed Annalisa Ericson in the film Varmlanders (Varmlanningarna) with Hilda Borgstr?m.

The first volume of poetry published by Swedish poet Gunnar Ekel?f, Late Arrival on Earth (Sent pa jorden), was among the first editions of 1932. In Denmark, two years earlier a novel about a poet, Havoc (Haevaerk) had begun a look at the world by Danish literature than would become from then increasingly more modern, although its author, Tom Kristensen, had in fact begun publishing poetry in Denmark in 1920 with the volume Freebooter’s dreams (Fribytterdromme). In 1932 it would be followed by the novel Jorgen Stein, written by Jacob Paludan. Playthings (Legetoj), written by H. C. Branner would introduce H. C. Branner to Danish audiences in 1935. Branner would later write the novels The Riding Master (Rytteren) in 1949 and No One Knows the Night (Ingen Kender Natten) in 1955.

AB Europa, housed at 10 Drottingatan in Stockholm, began its production of film in 1930, among the films it made being those of Schamyl Bauman, beginning in 1933 with Secret Agent Svensson (Hemliga Svensson), starring Fridolf Rhudin and Weyeler Hildebrand and Saturday Nights (Lordagskvallar), starring Ejvor Kjellstrom and Ruth Weijden. Both films also star Edvard Persson.

Swedish Sphinx Swedish Sphinx

In that the photography for one film was concluding as the photography for the other was beginning, the photoshoots with Clarence Sinclair Bull for both As You Desire Me and Grand Hotel were finished during the same afternoon.

In 1933, Eric Malmberg and Rune Carlsten directed the first film in which Signe Hasso was to appear, House of Silence (Tystnadens hus), with Fritiof Billquist. The film was the first to be photographed by cinematographer Harry Hasso, who also appears in the film as an actor. Like Greta Garbo, Signe Hasso travelled to Hollywood to film, her appearing in the films Heaven Can Wait (1943, Lubitsch) and A Double Life (1947, George Cukor). Swedish actress Emy Hagman appearred in her first film that year, Flickan fran varuhuset, under the direction of Anders Hendrikson and Torsten Lundqvist, Brita Appelgren having starred with her in the film. Much like Swedish actress Guje Lagerwall, the daughter of Victor Sjöström and wife of Sture Lagerwall, who was included in the early sound films of Sweden, Dora Söderberg, the daughter of playwright Hjamler Söderberg and wife of Swedish actor and director Rune Carlsten, was afforded one of her early on screen appearances in the film House of Silence.

Swedish Sphinx

Still photo from the film Queen Christina scanned from the original negative and e-mailed via Yahoo by author Mark A. Vieira.

Tancred Ibsen directed his first film in 1933, Vi som gar kjokkenveien, his following it with Synnove Solbakken (1934), starring Victor Sj?str?m and Fritiof Billquist. Gustaf Molander in 1933 directed the film Dear Relatives (Kara slakten), starring Ruth Stevens, Dora Söderberg and Sickan Carlsson and written by G?sta Stevens. Edvin Adolphson in 1933 directed the film What do Men Know (Vad veta val mannen), scripted by G?sta Stevens as well. Gosta Rodin in 1933 wrote and directed She or No One (Hon eller ingen, produced by Europa Film and starring Inga Tiblad, Anna Olin and Sture Lagerwall.

Ivar Johansson in 1933 wroted and directed both Boman’s Boy (Boman’s pojke), with Birgit Tengroth, and People of Halsingland (Halsingar), the first film in which Aurore Palmgren was to appear, with Karin Ekelund, Inga Tiblad and Edit Ernholm. Elner Akesson photographed the film for Svensk Talfilm. The former film was adapted by Ivar Johansson from a play by Siegfried Fischer, the latter film from a play by Henning Ohlsson. Marmstedt that year directed G?sta Ekman and Karin Kavli in the film Perhaps a Poet (Kanske en Diktare), co-scripted with Torsten Flodin. Also appearing in the film is Gunnar Olsson, who would direct his first film Jarnets man, with Hjalmar Peters, in 1935. Janets man was written by Johan-Olov Johansson and photographed by Eric Bergstrand. In 1934 Marmstedt follwed by directing Ake S?derblom and Astrid Marmstedt in the film Eva Goes Aboard (Eva gar Ombord) and Birgit Tengroth and Edvin Adoplphson in the film Atlantic Adventure (Atlantaventyret), also co-scripted with Torsten Flodin.

Hasse Ekman appeared on screen in 1933 under the direction of Ragnar Widestadt in the film Hemslavinnor, with Maj Tornblad, Anna Widforss and Isa Quensel. Gösta Stevens wrote the screenplay to the film. That year Hasse Ekman also appeared in the film A Night on Smygeholm (En Natt pa Smygeholm) under the direction of Sigurd Wallen, the film also starring Annalisa Ericson and Anna Olin. It was scripted by Gösta Stevens and photographed by Julius Jaenzon. Karin Ekelund appeared in her first film, Marriagable Daughters (Giftasvuxna dottrar), in 1933, the film directed by Sigurd Wallen from his own screenplay and photographed by Julius Jaenzon. Also starring in the film are Birgit Tengroth and Maritta Marke. Arne Bornebusch directed his first film in 1933, Hur behandlar du din hund?, it also being the first screenplay written by Bengt Idestam-Almquist. The pen name of Idestam-Alquist was Robin Hood, his having had been being being one of the early film critics of Sweden, later publishing the volume Den Svenska Filmens Drama: Sjöström och Stiller (1938). Idestam-Almquist had appeared as an actor in the 1920 film Gyurkovicsarna.

One of the more widely read of the early novels of Swedish author Eyvid Johnson, Here is Your Life (Har har du ditt live), was published in 1933, as was the novel Cape Farewell (Kap Farval), written by Harry Martinson.

Birgit Rosengren starred in her first two films in 1934, The Girls from the Old Town (Flickorna fran Gamla St’an) with Karin Ekelund and The Women Around Larsson (Kvinnorna kring Larsson), with Sture Lagerwall, the director of both films having been Schamyl Bauman. The following year she appeared in the film Flickor pa Fabrik directed by S?lve Cederstrand. Schamyl Bauman followed in 1934 with the film Larsson’s Second Marriage (Larsson i andra giftet).

In 1934 Gustaf Molander continued directing with the films A Quiet Affair (En Stille flirt) and Bachelor Father (Ungkarlspappan), both films from screenplays written by G?sta Stevens. Gustaf Edgren that year directed the film Karl Fredrick Reigns (Karl-Fredrik regerar) with Gunnar Skoglund and Pauline Brunius and Brit-Lis Edgren in what would be her first screen appearance. The cinematographer to the film was Martin Bodin, the scriptwriter, Oscar Rydqvist. Ivar Johansson that year directed Sickan Carlsson and Greta Woxholt in the film The Song to Her (Sangen till henne) and Anna Olin in the film Uppsagd, both films photographed by Martin Bodin. Uppsagd was the first film in which actress Margit Andelius was to appear. Emil A Lingheim directed his first film in 1934, Bland karparoch foreller. That year John W. Brunius directed with Pauline Brunius and Karin Albihn the film False Greta (Falska Greta), John W, Brunius. Brunius had appeared as actor in the 1931 film Red Day (Roda dagen), directed by Gustaf Edgren and written by S?lve Cederstand.

Photographed by Ake Dalqvist and directed by Edvin Adolphson and Sigurd Wallen, The Count of the Monk’s Bridge (Munksbrogreven, 1934-5) is a showcase for a young Ingrid Bergman. The screenplay is listed as having been written by Arthur Natrop and Siegfried Fischer (Greven fran Gamala Sta’n) and the scenario as having been penned by G?sta Stevens. In her autobiography, Ingrid Bergman recounts that during her first scenes she had nearly overstepped her bounds with the actress Tollie Zellman and that Edvin Adolphson had added a kind word for her.

Per G. Holmgren directed his first film in 1935, Havet lockar. Gosta Rodin in 1935 directed Sickan Carlsson and Lili Ziedner in the film Karlek efter noter, written by Torsten Lundqvist and photographed by Martin Bodin. That year he also directed Sickan Carlsson for Svensk Talfilms in The People of Smaland (Smalanningar), also scripted by Torsten Lundqvist. Rune Carlsten that year directed The Marriage Game (Aktenskaplekan) with Zarah Leander, Anna Olin and Ingeborg Strandin, the assistant director to the film Rolf Husberg, the script written by Ragnar Hylten-Cavallius. Directed by Edvin Adolphson for Wivefilm, cowritten with the director by Oscar Hemberg and photographed by Elner Akesson, Flickornas Alfred (1935) was to star Birgit Tengroth, Hilda Borstr?m and Olga Andersson. Andersson had starred with Greta Garbo in 1920 in the short films photographed by Ragnar Ring.

The first film edited by Oscar Rosander, Valborgsmassoafton, directed by Gustaf Edgren, was filmed in 1935. Its stars actress Linnea Hillberg.

After having directed the film Under False Colors (Under Flask Flagg, 1935), scripted by G?sta Stevens and starring Tutta Rolf, in 1936 Gustaf Molander directed the films The Honeymoontrip (Brollopsresan), starring Karin Swanström, Ulla Sorbon, Karin Albihn, Edvin Adolphson and Anne Marie Brunius, The Family Secret (Familjens hemlighet), from a screenplay by G?sta Stevens and On the Sunny Side (Pa solsidan), starring Edvin Adolphson, also from a screenplay written by Gösta Stevens. Ingrid Borthen had a small role in the film The Family Secret, it being the first film in which she was to appear. Gideon Wahlberg directed his first film in 1936, Soder om landsvagen, starring Agda Helin, Inga-Bodil Vetterlund, Mim Ekelund. It is particularly interesting that Swedish silent film director George af Klerker also appears in the film as an actor. The King is Coming (Kungen kommer), written and direted that year by Ragnar Hylten-Cavallius, starred G?sta Ekman, Birgit Tengroth, Ingeborg Strandin and Tollie Zellman and was produced for Terra film.

The beautiful Finnish actress Ansa Ikonen began starring in film durring 1935-36 in two films under the direction of Finnish director Valentin Vaala, Everybody’s Love (Kaikki rakastavat) and Surrogate Wife (Vaimoke), both having starred Tauno Palo.

the Swedish Sphinxthe

Still photograph from the film Camille scanned from the original negatives and e-mailed by Yahoo by author Mark A. Vieira.

Swedish SphinxSwedish Sphinx

Ragnar Arvedson in 1936 wrote and directed the films The Ghost of Bragehus (Spoket pa Bragehus),with Annalisa Ericson, Poor Millionares (Stackars Miljonarer), with Anna Olin and Are We Married (A vi giftas?) with Karin Ekelund. Johan Ulfstjerna (1936), starring Edith Erastoff and Einar Hanson, was directed by Gustaf Edgren and photographed by Julius Jaenzon. Edgren followed with the film The Russian Flu (Ryska snuvan, 1937), starring Edvin Adolphson. Greta Garbo biographer Fritiof Billquist appeared with Karin Ekelund and Birgit Rosengren in Flickor pa fabrik (1935) directed by S?lve Cederstrand, the first film in which actress Britta Estelle was to appear. Arthur Natorp in 1936 directed his first film, Karlek och monopol, photographed by Eric Bergstrand. Anders Henrikson in 1936 directed the film Annosera!, photographed by Martin Bodin. Gunnar Fischer that year worked as assistant cameraman with Swedish cinematographer Elner Akesson under the direction of Anders Henrikson on the film He, She, and the money (Han, hon, och pengarna), starring Ruth Stevens, Kirsten Heiberg and Maritta Marke. The film was editied by its assistant director, Rolf Husberg. Swedish actress Margit Andelius starred as the protagonist of Raggen, That’s Me (Det ar jag det) that year, the film having been directed by Schamyl Bauman and photographed by Hilmer Ekdahl. The film also starred Anna Olin, Aino Taube, and Isle-Norre Tromm.

Swedish poet Harry Martinson had two novels that appeared in bookstores during 1935 and 1936, Flowering Nettles (Nassloma blomma) and The Way Out (Vagen ut), respectively.

Cinematographer Ake Dahlqvist may very well be presently be known to audiences in the United States as the cameraman behind the viewfinder to the film Intermezzo (1936) directed by Gustaf Molander from a script he co-scripted with Gösta Stevens. Both Hasse Ekman and Anders Henrikson appear in the film, as do Inga Tiblad, Britt Hagman, Swedish silent film star Emma Meissner and the young actress that still directs audiences to the film by her having later remade it in the United States, Ingrid Bergman. Intermezzo was the first film in which actress Millan Bollanden, who was seen onscreen with Ingrid Bergman often, was to appear.

In her autobiography, Ingrid Bergman writes that she was reluctant when asked to film One Night Only (En Enda Natt, 1937) and that she had hoped to star in the film A Woman’s Face (En kvinnas Ansikte, 1936). Both films were directed by Gustaf Molander and scripted by G?sta Stevens. ”Look,” she had said, ”I’ll only do your film if you let me do the girl with the distorted face.” She quotes Gustaf Molander as having said, ”The technicalities of the distorted face were fine, but I couldn’t get the story right.” There is and account given by Ingrid Bergman of her having had been being asked to supply an eding to the plotline before the shooting of the film had finished and of the concluding scenes of the film having been based upon her idea. One Night Only was photographed by Elner Akesson, the assistant director the film having been Hugo Bolander. A Woman’s Face was photographed by Ake Dahlqvist.

Victor Sjostrom-Swedish Film”From letters to his wife during the summer and autumn of 1936 we can very well follow the work on the script, the planning, and the shooting of Under the Red Robe”. Begnt Forslund chronicles the retSwedish film director Victor Sjostrom to film directing in England with a script based on the writing of Stanely Weyman, which had already appeared on the stage as dramatized by Edward Rose.

Swedish FilmSigne Hasso appeared on the screen during 1937 under the direction of Schamyl Bauman, starring in the film Witches Night (Haxnatten) with actresses Ruth Stevens, Gerda Bjorne and Marta Lindlof. John Lindlof in 1937 directed the film Odygdens beloning. Gustaf Molander in 1937 directed Tutta Rolf in the film Sara lar sig folkvett, written by Gösta Stevens and photographed by Julius Jaenzon. Jaenzon also that year photographed the film Cleared for Action/Clearly to drabbning (Klart till drabbning), in which Edvin Adolphson directed his daughter, Swedish actrees Anna-Greta Adolphson. The film was scripted by Weyler Hildebrand and Torsten Lundqvist and also stars Ake Söderblom and Sickan Carlsson. Gosta Rodin wrote and directed the film The Pale Count (Bleka greven), photographed by Sven Thermaenius. Produced by Svensk Talfilms, the film stars Anna Olin, Karin Ahbihn and Aina Rosen.

Alice Babs starred in her first film in 1938, Thunder and Lightning/Flash and Thunder (Blixt och dunder), directed by Anders Henrikson and also starring Hasse Ekman, Frida Winnerstrand, Marianne Aminoff and Sickan Carlsson. Also starring in her first film in 1938 was Sif Ruud who appeared with Linnea Hillberg, Olga Hellquist, Gudrun Lendrup and Birgit Rosengren in Kloka gubben, directed by Sigurd Wallen and written by Gosta Werner. Hortensia Hedstrom that year appearred in her first film, Svensson ordinar allt, directed by Theodor Berthels. Co-scripted by Berthels and Gosta Werner for Svea Film, it stars Swedish silent film director George af Klerker, Karin Albihn, Sally Palmblad, Helga Hallen and Olga Hellquist. Anders Henrickson brought Tutta Rolf, Mimi Pollack and Karin Swanström to the screen in 1938 in the film The Great Love (Den stora Karleken) which he wrote and directed for Wivefilm, Stockholm. That year Gunnar Fischer photographed his first film, Only a Trumpter (Bara en trumpetare), scripted by Torsten Lundqvist and also directed by Henrikson. Director Nils Jerring in 1938 brought Wera Lindby and Ruth Weijeden to the screen in the film Figurligt talat, photographed by Martin Bodin. Ragnar Hylten-Cavallius that year directed Lars Hanson and Karin Ekelund in the film Wings around the Lighthouse (Vingar kring fyren), Cavallius also having the screenplay.

Gustaf Molander in 1938 directed Ingrid Envall in her first film Dollar, starring Georg Rydeberg, Tutta Rolf, Kotti Chave and Birgit Tengroth. Filmed from a script co-written by Stina Bergman, the cinematographer to the film was Ake Dahlqvist. Dollar begins as a film of interior shots and Molander tracks with his characters as he cuts between close shots, oftent cutting with the camera one moment and abruptly cutting to brief dialouge shots, or in between fairly quick dollyshots and close shots positioned from varying angles during an early card game scene. In the adjacent interior scene, Ingrid Bergman dances with her own shadow and the shadow of her parrot as Molander’s camerawork is moved into a drawing room with four women, each crossing the set untill the men and women later pair together, a pairing together that locates the rest of the film in ther interior of a ski resort. The pace established by shot legnth then slows down and the editing becomes less pronounced as the men and women are the kept together more often as a group, more often in full shot as the storyline relies almost entirely upon dialouge for its development as each character crosses the set from one conversation to the next. Molander often cuts quickly after a line of dialouge, often constructing the shot-structure of the individual scenes by cutting on action. The is only one character other than the one played by Edvin Adolphson introduced during the film, that of an actress from the United States, Mary, the dollar princess.

Sven Thermaenius that year photographed the film Du gama du fria, written and directed by Gunnar Olsson and starring Hilda Borgstr?m, Karin Ekelund, Sigurd Wallen and Gull Natrop. The film was produced by AB Europafilm. Kaj Aspegren directed his first film, Studieresan, in 1938, photographed by Erik Bergstrand and starring Signe Lundberg-Settergren and Marta Dorff.

Swedish Film actress Greta Garbo

Still photograph from the film Ninotchka scanned from original negative and sent via yahoo email by author Mark Vieira.

In 1939, Victor Sjostrom appeared as an actor in two films,The Old Man’s Coming (Gubben kommer) ,with Birgit Tengroth, Olaf Molander, Aino Taube and Tora Teje, directed by Per Lindberg, and in Towards New Times (Mot nya tider), directed by Sigurd Wallen and starring Carl Barklind, Anna Olin and Marianne Aminoff. Per Lindberg in 1939 also directed the film Glad dig din Ungdom, starring Birgit Tengroth, Hilda Borgstr?m, and Anna Lindahl. Photographed by Ake Dahlqvist, the film was co-scripted by Vilhelm Moberg with Per Lindberg and Stina Bergman from his novel Sankt Sedebetyg.

Weyler Hildebrand in 1939 directed Sickan Carlsson and Ake Ohberg in Landstormens lilla Lotta, scripted by Torsten Lundqvist. Rolf Husberg began as an assistant director to the film Giftasvuxna dottrar (1933). He directed his first film, Midnattsolens in 1939. Gustaf Molander used the talented pioneer Julius Jaenzon in 1939 to photograph Filmen om Emelie Hogvist starring Signe Hasso and Elsa Burnett, the first film in which Karin Norgren had been given a small role. Elsa Burnett also starred in Molander’s film Ombyte fornojer, with Tutta Rolf. Both films were scripted by Gösta Stevens. Signe Hasso would also that year appear in the film Us Two (Vi Twa), directed by Schamyl Bauman and starring Ilse-Norre Tromm and Gunnar Bjornstrand in an early film role. Schamyl Bauman in 1939 directed Anders Henriksson and Sonja Wigert in the film Her Little Majesty (Hennes Lilla Majestat), the film also starring Swedish film directors Carl Barklind and Gunnar Hoglund. Also directed by Schamyl Bauman that year was the film Efterlyst, photographed by Hilmer Ekdahl and starring Edvin Adolphson, Birgit Rosengren, Isa Quensel, Carin Swensson and Linnea Hillberg. Anders Henrikson in 1939 directed the film Valfangare, with Tutta Rolf. Ragnar Frisk directed Ann-Margret Bergendahl in her first film in 1939, Den Moderna Eva, photographed by Karl-Erik Alberts and starring Ake Uppström. Siv Ericks appeared in her first film that year Rosor varje kvall, directed by Per Axel-Branner. Also in the film are Carl Barklind, Hjordis Petterson, Ake Ohberg and Tore Lindwall. Gideon Wahlberg in 1939 directed Ann Mari Udderberg and Naemi Briese in the film We from the Theater (Vi som gar scenevagen). Gosta Rodin during 1939 directed the film Charmers at Sea (Sjocharmorer) produced by Fribergs Filmbyra and photographed by Albert Rudling. The film stars Aino Taube, Karin Swanstrom, Marianne Lofgren and Ullastina Rettig.

Both Sigurd Wallen and Olaf Molander appeared in front of the camera with Britt-Lis Edgren in the 1940 film A Big Hug (Stora Famnen), Britt-Lis the daughter of the director of the film, Gustaf Edgren. The film was photographed by Julius Jaenzon and also stars the Swedish actresses Gerda Lundqvist and Signe Hasso. Gustaf Molander in 1940 directed the film A, but one lion (En, men ett lejon) with Fridtjof Mjoen and Annalisa Ericson. The screenplay to the film was written by G?sta Stevens and again, Molander would be behind the camera while Julius Jaenzon was the film’s photographer. On the marquee that year, along with the name Aino Taube, was the film Everybody at His Station (Alle man pa post) written by Torsten Lundqvist and directed by Anders Henrikson, the assistant director to the film Ragnar Fisk. That year, Alf Sj?berg wrote and directed the films They Staked Their Lives (Med livet som instats) and the first film in which the actresses Barbro Flodquist and Hedvig Lindby were to appear, and Blossom Time (Den blomstertid), photographed by Harald Berglund with Goran Strindberg as assistant cameraman and starring Sture Lagerwall, Gerd Hagman, Carl Barklind and Arnold Sj?strand. Barbro Flodquist also that year appeared in the film Hanna i societen, directed by Gunnar Olsson and starring Elsa Carlsson and Carl Barklind. Schamyl Bauman in 1940 directed the films Heroes in Yellow in Blue (Hjaltar i gult och blatt), starring Tollie Zellmann, Barbro Kollber and Emy Hagman, and An Able Man (Karl for sin hatt), starring Birigit Tengroth, Vera Valdo and Gull Natrop starring Ake Ohberg directed his first film in 1940, Romance (Romans) in which Fritiof Billqvist appeared. Introduced to the screen that year by Ragnar Arvedson, Eva Henning premiered in the film Gentleman att hyra, photographed by Martin Bodin. Sigge Furst and Mimi Pollack also appear in the film. June Night (Juninatten) was directed in 1940 by Per Lindberg.

Swedish Film actress Greta Garbo

Still photograph from the film Two Faced Woman scanned from the original negatives and emailed via Yahoo by author Mark A. Vieira.

After directing June Night, the following year Per Lindgren directed the the film The Talk of the Town (Det sags pa stan, 1941), photographed by Ake Dalqvist and starring Marianne Lofgren, Gudron Brost, Elsa Marianne von Rosen, Mona Martenson, Elsa Widborg and Bojan Westin, in what was to be her first appearance on the screen. Bojan Westin has recently appeared in several films, including Brevbaravens hemlighet (2006, Hanna Andersson), Koffein (2007, Akesson, Olsson) and Dorotea i dodsriket (2007, Kati Mets). The assistant director to the film Talk of the Town was Arne Mattsson. Produced by Svea Film, Stockholm, it was one of the first two films in which Eva Dahlbeck was to appear, the other being Only a Woman (Bara en kvinna), directed by Anders Henrikson for Wivefilm, Stockholm and photographed by Elner Akesson. Also starring in the film is Karin Ekelund. Anders Henrikson also that year directed Anio Taube in Life Goes On (Livet gar vidare), which he cowrote with Begnt Idestam-Almquist. The film also stars Hasse Ekman. Director Gunnar Skoglund that year teamed Karin Ekelund and Edvin Adolphson in the film Woman on Board (En Kvinna Omboard), photographed by Hilding Bladh and also starring Sigge Furst. Ragnar Arvedson in 1941 directed the films Sa tukta en akta man, the assistant director to the film Arne Mattsson. Ung dam med tur, photographed by Harald Berglund and written by Torsten Floden, was also directed by Ragnar Arvedson in 1941, it starring Sonja Wigert, Elly Christiansson, Stina Hedberg and Ake Ohberg. That year G?sta Cederlund directed his first film, Fransson den forskracklinge with Hilda Borgstr?m, Rune Carlsten, Elof Ahrle, Sonja Wigert and Marianne Lofgren as well as the film Uppat igen starring Elof Ahrle, Vera Valdor and Berit Rosengren.

In 1941, Gunnar Olsson directed Mai Zetterling in her first film, Lasse-Maja, photographed by Harald Bergland and written by Torsten Floden, in which Zetterling starred with Margit Manstad and Sture Lagerwall. She next appeared in Sunshine Follows Rain/Rain Follows the Dew (Driver dag faller regn, 1946), directed by Gustaf Edgren and based on a novel by Margit Soderholm. Alf Sj?berg in 1941 directed the film Home from Babylon (Hem fran Babylon) starring Gerd Hagman and Arnold Sjostrand. Gustaf Molander in 1941 directed Tonight or Never (I natt-eller aldrig) with Tollie Zellman and Bright Prospects (Den ljusnade framtid) with Elly Christiansson, Julius Jaenzon the photographer of the latter. Produced by Svea Film in 1941, Cosy Barracks (Hemtreunad i kasern) was directed by Gosta Rodin and photographed by Erik Bergstrand. The film stars Tollie Zellman, Anna-lisa Baude, Annalisa Ericson and Rut Holm.

Anders Henrikson in 1942 both directed and starred with Sonja Wigert in both Youth in Chains (Ungdom i bojor) and Fallet Ingegerd Bremssen, which, starring Ivar Kage and G?sta Cederlund, was the first film in which Siv Thulin had been given a small role. Anders Henrikson also starred with Sonja Wigert inBlod och eld (1945), the assistant director to the latter Bengt Palm. Gunnar Skoglund in 1942 directed Maj-Britt Nilsson in the film Varat gang. Gunnar Fischer worked as an assistant camerman in 1942 under Swedish cinematographer Ake Dahlqvist on a film edited by Oscar Rosander, Jacob’s Ladder (Jacobs Stege), directed by Gustaf Molander and starring Birgit Tengroth, Marianne Lofgren and Viran Rydkvist. Gustaf Molander also that year directed Hilda Borgstr?m, Erik Hampe Faustman, Eva Dahlbeck and Anders Ek in the film Ride Tonight (Ride This Night/Ride Tonight, Rid i natt, 1942), based on a novel by Vilhelm Moberg. Doctor Glas (Doktor Glas, 1942), adapted from a novel by Hjamar Soderberg by Rune Carlsten and directed by Gustaf Edgren, was to include the actresses Hilda Borgstr?m and Irma Christenson, it also having been the first film in which Victor Sj?str?m’s daughter, Guje Lagerwall, was to appear. Hugo Bolander directed his first two films in 1942, Three Glad Fools (Tre glada tokar), and Sextuplets (Sexlingar). Bolander had been the assistant director to the film Steel (Stal, 1940), directed by Per Lindberg, a film that had starred not only Alf Kjellin and Gudron Brost, but Signe Hasso, Karin Swanstrom and Torre Svennberg.

The following year, Erik Hampe Faustman directed his first film , Night in the Harbor (Natt i hamn, 1943) and scripted the film, its cinematographer having had been being Gunnar Fischer. Eric Hampe Faustman also directed the film Sonja that year, which he co-scripted with G?sta Stevens, it having starred Birgit Tengroth, Else Albiin, Gunn Wallgren and Sture Lagerwall. Sonja was photographed by cinematographer Hilding Bladh. Hampe Faustman that year appeared as an actor in Gustaf Molander’s film Alsking, self give me (Alsking jag ger mig), which was also written by Gösta Stevens. Starring with Faustman in the film were Sonja Wigert, Elsa Carlsson, Marianne Lofgren and Carin Swensson. Haustman followed in 1944 by directing the film The Girl and Devil (Flickan och Djavulen), starring Hilda Borgstr?m and Torgny Anderberg.

In 1943, Olof Molander directed Mimi Nelson in her first film, I Slew (Jag drapte), also starring Mai Zetterling, Anders Henrikson, Hilda Borgstr?m and Irma Christenson. That year G?sta Cederlund directed her in the film Kungsgatan, which also starred Barbro Kollberg. Ragnar Frisk in 1943 directed For lack of evidence (I brist pa brevis), scripted by Per Holmgren and Arne Mattsson and starring Birgit Tengroth and Holger Lowenadler. Frisk also that year directed Nils Poppe in the film The Actor (Aktoren), photographed by Hilmer Ekdahl and co-starring Sigge Furst and Agda Helin. Begnt Janzon in 1943 wrote and directed the film We Met the Storm (Vi Motte Stormen), with Stig Jarrel and Anna-Lisa Baude, for AB Nordisk-Filmproduktion. Ivar Johansson that year wrote and directed the film Young Blood (Ungt Blod), with Toivo Pawlo and Olof Widgren. Johansson also that year directed Ake Gronberg in the film Captured by a Voice (Fangad av en rost) photographed by Ernst Westerberg and produced by Film AB Lux. Sigge Furst that year also starred in the film Ghosts, Ghosts (Det Spokar, Det Spokar) directed by Hugo Bolander and produced by Film AB Image. Eva Henning that year appeared in the film The Awakening of Youth (Nar Ungdomen vaknar), directed by Gunnar Olsson. Cinematographer Sven Nykvist photographed his first film, along with photographer Olle Nordemar, in 1943, In the darkest Corner of Smaland (I morkaste Smaland), under the direction of Schamyl Bauman, the film starring Sigurd Wallen, Eivor Landstrom, Eric Petschler and Gull Natrop. Silent film director Eric Petschler also appears in the film. Gunnar Skoglund in 1943 directed the film En var i vapen starring Ingrid Borthen, Eric Hampe Faustman, Rita Sandstorm, Fritiof Billquist and Birgit Lindkvist in what was to be her first film appearance. Bjorge Larsson during 1943 directed the film A Girl for Me (En Flickan for mej) for Europa Film, it starring Sickan Carlsson, Kerstin Lindahl and Hilda Borgstrom. Ragnar Arvedson in 1943 brought Irma Christenson and Ann-Margret Bjorlin to the screen in the film Herre med Portfolj.

Gustaf Molander in 1944 brought the film The Invisible Wall/The Unseen Wall (Den osynliga muren), starring Inga Tiblad, Irma Christenson, Hilda Borgström and Britta Brunius, to the screen. Swedish film directors Rune Carlsten and Eric Faustman also appear in the film. In 1944, Gunnar Ollsson directed The Turn of the Century (Nar seklet var ungt) his following it in 1945 with The Happy Tailor (Den Glade skraddaren), both films being among those in which Fritiof Billquist had appeared. The Turn of the Century (Nar seklet var ungt) had been the first film in which Brita Billsten had been given a small role, her having had appeared in it with Stina Hedberg, Marianne Gyllenhamar and Mim Eklund. En dotter fodd, the first film in which Ruth Kasdan was cast, was directed in 1944 by Gosta Cederlund and starred Barbro Kollberg. Ake Ohberg in 1944 directed Swedish Film actress Karin Ekelund in the film Snowstorm (Snostromen), photographed by Harald Berglund. Also appearing in the film are Liane Linden and Helga Brofeldt. Ivar Johansson that year directed Birgit Tengroth in the film Skogen ar var arvedel, the assistant director to the film Arne Mattsson. Weyeler Hildebrand in 1944 directed Sonja Wigert, Mona Martenson and Gunnar Bj?strand in the film My People are Not Yours (Mitt folk ar icke ditt). Ragnar Falck, who appeared as an actor in several Swedish Films during 1930-1960, directed his first two films, Fia Jansson from the South Side (Fia Jansson fran Soder), for Kungsfilm, and Your Relatives Are Best (Slakten ar blast), for Wive Film, that year. Fredrick Anderson in 1944 brought Ingid Bouthen, Annelie Thureson and Eivor Rolke to the screen in the film Karleck och allsang. Rune Carlsten that year wrote and directed the film Count only the Happy Moments (Rakna de Lyckliga Stunderna Blott), with Sonja Wigert, Arnold Sj?strand and Eva Dahlbeck. Gunnar Skoglund in 1944 brought Vibeke Falk and Monicka Tropp to the screen in the film The Clock of Ronneberga (Klockan pa Ronneberga). Alf Sjoberg that year wroted and directed the film The Royal Hunt (Kungajakt), starring Inga Tiblad.

Filmed in Sweden and directed by Carl Th. Dreyer, Two People (Tva Manniskor, 1944) was not released in Denmark due to low box office returns and a second Swedish film to be directed by Dreyer was cancelled. Dreyer reportedly had wanted Anders Ek and Gunn Walgren to portray the couple upon which the on screen action of the film is centered, his describing the female character of the film as being ”young warmblooded and sensual”. When filmed the couple was portrayed quite differently by Wanda Rothgart and George Rydeberg.

Sailors (Blajackor 1945), directed by Rolf Husberg with Annalisa Ericson, was photographed by Gunnar Fischer. Rolf Husberg directed Siv Hansson and Ann Sophie Honeth that year in the film The Children from Frostmo Mountain (Barnen fran Frostrnofjallent), photographed by Sven Nykvist.

Molander in 1945 directed Galgmannen and in 1946 directed It’s my Model(Det ar min modell),starring Alf Kjellin and Maj-Britt Nilsson, both films photographed by Ake Dalqvist. The screenwriter of It’s My Model was Rune Lindström. Rune Lindstrom that year wrote and directed the film Aunt Green, Aunt Brown and Aunt Lilac (Tant Grun, Tant Brun, och Tant Gredelin), starring Britta Brunius, Elsa Ebbensen-Thorblad, Irma Christenson and Sigge Furst. Cinematographer Max Wilen photographed his first film that year, Det var en gang, directed by Arne Bornebusch with Mona Martenson. Ake Ohberg in 1945 brought Barbro Kollberg to the screen in the film Girls in the Harbor (Flickor i hamn) and Eva Henning to the screen in Rosen pa Tistelon, G?sta Folke the asistant director to the latter film. Bjorge Larsson in 1945 directed Annalissa Ericson, G?sta Cederlund and Sture Lagerwall in the film A Charming Miss (En fortjussande Froken) and the film The Thirteen Chairs (13 stolar), photographed by Sven Nykvist. Adapted from the novel published by Vilhelm Moberg in 1933, Mans Kvinna, starring Edvin Adolphson, Birgit Tengroth and Gudron Brost was that year directed by Gunnar Skoglund; coscripted by Vilhelm Moberg, Ankeman Jarl, starring Ingrid Backlin and Maritta Marke was that year directed by Sigurd Wallen. The assistant director to the latter was Lennart Wallen. The Serious Game (Den Allvarsamma leken, 1945), based on a novel by Hjalmar Soderberg and starring Viveca Lindfors and Eva Dahlbeck, would be directed by Rune Carlsten.

That year was also to mark the appearance of a new director of Swedish film, Ingmar Bergman, his writing his own screenplay to the film A Young Girl’s Troubles (Kris) as an adaptation of the play A Mother’s Heart (Moderdyret), penned by Leck Fischer. The cinematographer to the film, which starred Inga Landgre as its central character, was Gösta Roosling and its editor was Oscar Rosander. It was during 1942 that Ingmar Bergman had begun adapting screenplays for Svensk Filmindustri. As noted by Donner, the first had been a screen version of the novel Katinka, written by Astrid Varing; noted by Peter Cowie the first had been a novel entitled Scared to Live. In his autobiography, Images, Ingmar Bergman writes without noting the author of the novel, and explains that after he was given an office,the script department was under Stina Bergman, to whom, it almost completely belonged, seemingly.

Google Groups Breta
svenska-filminstitutet
Visit this group

Google Custom Search

– last modified:

Swedish Film 1946-1960

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminsitutet 1960-1975

Swedish Film

Swedish Film

Photos and or links may be removed or replaced due to design considerations. Please write if you have any html codes you think I should try or copyright questions. Streaming videos are for the main part thought public domain unless otherwise noted; posters should be identified through their link. If you are waiting for a letter from the present author, please send a second letter if necessary.

Fw: Re: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo

maj 24, 2009 av scottlord

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

— On Wed, 9/21/05, Mark Vieira <thestarlightstudio@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Mark Vieira <thestarlightstudio@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo
To: ”scott lord” <lord02141@yahoo.com>
Date: Wednesday, September 21, 2005, 1:23 AM

Dear Scott:
 
Thank you for including me in your web site. I have lots of scans from original Garbo negatives that you are welcome to use.
 
Sincerely,
 
Mark A. Vieira 
 
——-Original Message——-
 
Date: 09/20/05 19:20:53
Subject: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo
 
Dear Mr. Vieira,
You address was given to me by a member of a Norma
Shearer yahoo mailing list group.
Sometimes are Greta Garbo groups are slow and there’s
not alot of mail. I thought I ask if I could invite
you to a Greta Garbo mailing list.
I have a webpage on Garbo. It begins with Swedish
silent film and Ingmar Bergman. Could you visit the
page- just scroll down to find the Garbo, your webpage
is linked near the middle of the page.
Thanks,
Scott Lord
 
 
Note: forwarded message attached.
 
 
 
 
 
______________________________________________________
Yahoo! for Good
Donate to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.
 
 

Fw: Re: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo

maj 24, 2009 av scottlord

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

— On Wed, 9/21/05, Mark Vieira <thestarlightstudio@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Mark Vieira <thestarlightstudio@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo
To: ”scott lord” <lord02141@yahoo.com>
Date: Wednesday, September 21, 2005, 1:23 AM

Dear Scott:
 
Thank you for including me in your web site. I have lots of scans from original Garbo negatives that you are welcome to use.
 
Sincerely,
 
Mark A. Vieira 
 
——-Original Message——-
 
Date: 09/20/05 19:20:53
Subject: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo
 
Dear Mr. Vieira,
You address was given to me by a member of a Norma
Shearer yahoo mailing list group.
Sometimes are Greta Garbo groups are slow and there’s
not alot of mail. I thought I ask if I could invite
you to a Greta Garbo mailing list.
I have a webpage on Garbo. It begins with Swedish
silent film and Ingmar Bergman. Could you visit the
page- just scroll down to find the Garbo, your webpage
is linked near the middle of the page.
Thanks,
Scott Lord
 
 
Note: forwarded message attached.
 
 
 
 
 
______________________________________________________
Yahoo! for Good
Donate to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.
 
 

Fw: Re: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo

maj 24, 2009 av scottlord

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

— On Wed, 9/21/05, Mark Vieira <thestarlightstudio@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: Mark Vieira <thestarlightstudio@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo
To: ”scott lord” <lord02141@yahoo.com>
Date: Wednesday, September 21, 2005, 1:23 AM

Dear Scott:
 
Thank you for including me in your web site. I have lots of scans from original Garbo negatives that you are welcome to use.
 
Sincerely,
 
Mark A. Vieira 
 
——-Original Message——-
 
Date: 09/20/05 19:20:53
Subject: Fwd: [A_Free_Soul] Re: Vieira / Garbo
 
Dear Mr. Vieira,
You address was given to me by a member of a Norma
Shearer yahoo mailing list group.
Sometimes are Greta Garbo groups are slow and there’s
not alot of mail. I thought I ask if I could invite
you to a Greta Garbo mailing list.
I have a webpage on Garbo. It begins with Swedish
silent film and Ingmar Bergman. Could you visit the
page- just scroll down to find the Garbo, your webpage
is linked near the middle of the page.
Thanks,
Scott Lord
 
 
Note: forwarded message attached.
 
 
 
 
 
______________________________________________________
Yahoo! for Good
Donate to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.
 
 

Greta Garbo

maj 21, 2009 av scottlord
Greta Garbo
Greta Garbo

Swedish Film

Greta Garbo banner designed for Scott Lord by Ulrich in Berlin, Germany; color tint added by Amy in Southern California.

scottlord Greta Garbo: den har sida i Svensk

Greta Garbo

Greta GarboThe 100th birthday of Greta Garbo was a perfect time to recognize the efforts of Ase Kleveland, if only to introduce her as a proponent of classic film and the viewing of film with an interest in film history; she during September 2005 at the Cinemateket Filmhuset not only introduced Greta Garbo to Swedish audiences, but marked the love for the actress throughout Scandanavia. In an e-mailed correspondence to the present author, she wrote, ”Many thanks for your greetings. I can assure that the Garbo celebrations was a great success indeed.” Both Stockholm and Goteborg screened the Greta Garbo film Camille (Kameliadamen, George Cukor, 1937) on September 16, 2005, the former at the Biografen Sture, the latter at the Biografen Svea. The film co-stars Robert Taylor and Henry Daniell. Just as the films of Victor Sjostrom have toured the United States, the Greta Garbo Centenary is marked by screenings of films representative of the body of work the actress appeared in on screen before her retiring. Among the films being shown near her birthday, and into early December of 2005, are a four minute print of Greta Louise Gustafson in Luffar-Petter and a two minute print of her crossing the Atlantic from Stockholm to the United States in an unidentified film that would seen to more than a number of dedicated Garbo viewers to be footage from the film En decemberdag pa Atlanten, directed by Ragnar Ring and photographed by Gustav Berg, there being an account of Garbo and Ring having spoken to each other while crossing the Atlantic.

Greta Garbo.

In the United States, during the summer of 2005 the Niles Essany Silent Film Museum added a film to its June schedule in which Greta Garbo is at her most beautiful because it is one of her most melodramatic, the silent film The Kiss (Kyssen, Feyder, 1929, seven reels) with Conrad Nagel. An emailed thankyou-newsletter from the San Fransisco Silent Film Festival not only announced the opening of the Edison Theater of the Silent Film Museum in Niles and its series of films for the summer in its listings of upcoming events, but added among its listings a week long screening of films of Greta Garbo at the Stanford Theatre in Palo Alto, during which the Silent Garbo film A Woman of Affairs (Grona hatten, Clarence Brown, 1928, nine reels), starring Lewis Stone and John Gilbert and including Johnny Mack Brown and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. was screened on September 21, 2005. A Woman of Affairs flickered across the silverscreens of the Filmhuset in Stockholm, Sweden to begin the month of October, 2005 and inside the screening rooms of the Garbo Society in Hogsby, Sweden on November 14, 2004. Accompanied by the Hogsby exhibition, the film later was introduced by Kevin Brownlow during a January, 2006 screening in Erlangen, Germany.

Greta GarboAs part of the Toronto International Film Festival, in a series that concluded June 25,2005 with Greta Garbo in the film A Two Faced Woman (George Cukor), there was a screening of not only Part I + Part II of The Saga of Gosta Berling, an entire 183 minutes, but also of a ten minute print of The Divine Woman (Victor Sjostrom, eight reels, 1928) and a four minute print of Reklamfilm Pub Greta Garbo (1921, Ragnar Ring. The silent Garbo film Flesh and the Devil (Atra, Clarence Brown, 1926 nine reels), starring Lars Hanson and John Gilbert, The Mysterious Lady (Den mystika kvinna, Fred Niblo, 1928 nine reels) and the A Woman of Affairs were projected onto screens in Finland at the Forssa Silent Film Festival, August 27-28, 2004. The Forssan Elavienkuvien Teatteri was open from 1906 to 1930 before being reopened in 2001. The Divine Woman, directed by Victor Sjostrom and starring Greta Garbo was featured on YouTube in a 2007 listing and could be viewed as a fragment of the lost film over the internet; it has since been relisted and can still currently be viewed in a 2009 listing on Google Video-You Tube.

The silent film of Greta Garbo is featured in the Kevin Brownlow documentary Trick of the Light narrated by James Mason and is presently offered online in Windows media, divided into two parts and including the silent film documentary Hollywood Trick of the Light pt. 2, by dograt.com/hollywood.html. Greta Garbo visited James Mason in 1949 while they were planning to film La Duchesse de Langeais, an adaptation of Balzac’s novel The Thirteen.

Greta Garbo Kevin Brownlow is the director of the biographical documentary Garbo (2005), a film which quickly after having been aired was mentioned in the e-mailed posts of members that correspond using several different Yahoo mailing list groups in the United States and which was also screened at the Filmhuset as part of the Swedish Film Institute’s marking Garbo’s 100th birthday. Not all of the posts having had been being on mailing lists specificlly dedicated to the actress Greta Garbo, in an e-mailed correspondence to the present author, John Gilbert biographer Leatrice Gilbert Fountain, wrote, ”I hoped you watched the Garbo documentary on Sept 6 on TCM. I run through a lot of it and am very pleased the way they handled my father. Perhaps you can watch for a rerun.” In the documentary she introduces Flesh and the Devil, describing the actor and actress during a sequence that is spliced with a segment of film of the director Clarence Brown; while describing Greta Garbo as having been independent of other people. Brown in the film praises Greta Garbo for her work in from of the camera and her work during retakes by noting that behind the camera he was at a distance from her and that her acting translated into movement what he wanted to appear on the screen. Interviewed in the documentary are Greta Garbo author Karen Swenson, Greta Garbo, who is more Garbo like in her providing an emotional rather than detailed account of the actress, and author Mark Vieira, who introduces cameraman William Daniels and The Torrent. In that the documentary begins to address the extratextural discourse that accompanied the characters that were to be portrayed on screen by Greta Garbo, it begins with footage of the city Stockholm and the two visits Greta Garbo made to the city, as well as brief footage of Sjostrom and Stiller bookended by footage of Swedish actress Mimi Pollack. Near to the 100th bithday of Greta Garbo, Mark Vieira emailed members of a Yahoo group announcing that his forthcoming book will be about Irving Thalberg and that it will include many photographs of Norma Shearer and Jean Harlow. The daughter of Norma Shearer, bookstore owner Katherine Thalberg, died in the beginning of January, 2006.

Two of the brief scenes introducing Sunday Silent Nights on Turner Classic Movies are from the silent films of Greta Garbo. A scene from the film Flesh and the Devil with Greta Garbo and John Gilbert dancing together is used in the introductory sequence, and later in the sequence a scene from The Kiss with Greta Garbo in close up is used. The scene with Lillian Gish peering out at the storm is from The Wind, directed by Victor Sjostrom. The other silent films in the Turner Classic Movies introductory sequence, all of which were filmed in the United States, include two scenes from Our Dancing Daughter (1928, Beuamont), one which is a room full of balloons and the other an actress in front of a mirror, The Big Parade (Vidor), with John Gilbert kissing a leading lady, The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse with a brief scene of Rudolf Valentino smoking, two scenes from Greed (von Stroheim), one with actress Zazu Pitts in a hat and the other to conclude the sequence with Gibson Gowland, Noah’s Ark with Goerge O’Bien looking into the rain, The Crowd with actor James Murray smiling, Show People with Marion Davies using a handkerchief as a prop and a brief clip from Keaton’s The Cameraman that shows his eyes.

Greta GarboThe Associated Press marked the 100th birthday with Jan-Erik Billinger having announced the opening of a new library at the Swedish Film Institute, one that includes film magazines from the United States from the early silent film period. Jan-Erik Billinger, who remarked the it was mostly coincidental that the library was ready in time for Garbo’s centenarry, is the Head of the Information Department at the Swedish Film Institute. Soon there will be a display at the Swedish Film Institute; when Pictures of Greta (Bilder av Greta), a collection of photographs, is finished being viewed at the Stura Cinema in Stockholm, it will be transferred to the Film House.

Swedish Film-GarboAlong with it will be shown costumes the actress wore while filming The Saga of Gosta Berling with director Mauritz Stiller, her private correspondence as well as her personal belongings from childhood. Of the film that first paired Greta Garbo and Lars Hanson, one webpage author on the internet, Hazel, in her latest update reviews the onscreen performance of Greta Garbo, ”Already in her first movie, Garbo gave a nuanced and mature performance.” An e-mailed newsletter during April of 2006 from Kino Video announced the release on DVD of the first movie in which Greta Garbo appeared, The Saga of Gosta Berling, along with the release two other films directed by her first director, Mauritz Stiller.

In The Perfect Murder (Det Perfekte Mord),directed by Eva Isaksen, Anna-Lena Hemstrom believes herself to be Garbo,or rather the characters portrayed by Greta Garbo. During the making of a film, she enacts particular scenes from Garbo’s films, in her bedroom before making love, the actress on the screen becoming the spectator within the film through an identification with the action of the film actress, the idealized appropriated into the dramaturgy of the erotic;her movements are those of Greta Garbo in character- the only way to become authentic is to be the absolute object of her look, and only then by being her paramour. Intringuingly, the fabula of the film, the events of each particular scene, and its syhuzet, the presentation of its plotline, merge as its characters encounter each other, as she entices each lover toward fantasy, toward the sensual. Visually, the film represents the act of love as being both abstract and concrete: it only depicts the actress during sex in as much as each instance, and the accompanying dialouge, is particularly connected to the narrative, there being a specificality within each of the scenes upon which the plotline is dependent, one in which the actress is convinced that she knows each of her lovers from a specific Greta Garbo film and that she has to make love to them according to the juncture of events that comprise the scene in the film. She is an actress entertaining the fantasies of the actress Greta Garbo and yet, although there are no abstract shots during the film, their being shown in the bedroom uninterruped by cut in shots that would add meaning to the scene, sex acquires something that is metaphoric in that she is Garbo and for each of her lovers it can only be fantasy, it becoming intangible at the very moment of sexual climax to where their very corporeality is unknowable, that in fact quite possibly known only by Garbo as well- there is an objectification of the actress as Garbo and it is her tragic beauty that has validity, her making love as the Garbo she has portrayed on the screen that carries her to the next lover from a different, later film of Greta Garbo, sex a metaphor for Garbo’s elusiveness and her star quality. Early in the film Anna-Lena Hemstrom is in the role of an actress in the audience of the on-screen Greta Garbo, ”How can one surrender oneself so completely.” From there ,in a white bedroom and white nightgown symbolic of post-coital solitude, she introduces an eroticism of both reclusiveness and of sphinx-like mystery, of Garbo in character and only in character and of Anna-Lena Hemstrom as Greta, in character and only in character whispering, ”Not now.” ”Not now.” Mai Zetterling has said, ”I don’t have Garbo’s austere tragic beauty.” Just as the film establishes the narrative on two levels, that of the actress that can play a character on screen other than herself and invites the director of the film she is making to her apartment and that of the actress as Garbo in front of the camera, only known through the fulfillment of their being conjugal, Garbo herself was described by Nils Asther, who starred with her in Wild Orchids (Vilda orkideer, Sidney Franklin, 1929, eleven reels) and The Single Standard (En kvinnas moral, 1929, eight reels), as being shy. Norma Shearer had said, ”She was very cordial with me- and then, after clasping my hand, she was suddenly gone.” In his Film Essays and Criticism, a valuable introduction to film theory, Rudolf Arnheim gives Greta Garbo only a two page ”portait”, but it is from 1928 and may be more than what is a cursory glance, his writing, ”On cat’s feet, her coat pulled tightly about her and her hands folded in her lap, Greta Garbo passes censorship.” Arnheim sees Greta Garbo as erotic, as an erotic object. The Perfect Murder has been aired in the United States on The International Channel. Eva Isaksen newest film is currently being unspooled in Norway.

Kerstin, a Swedish writer from Stockholm, was among the first of several Swedish bloggers to notice that Greta Garbo, the actress and the mystery, will be portrayed by Anna-Karin Eskilsson in the film Garbo, Svenska Dagbladet having announced during September of 2008 that the film, a biography, was slated to be lensed by Budd Bregman and screened to audiences during 2010.

Greta Garbo-Flesh and the Devil.

Louise Brooks (Diary of a Lost Girl, Das Tagebuch Einer Verlorenen Pabst, 1929 nine reels) had written, ”Garbo is all movement. First she gets the emotion, and out of the emotion, comes the dialouge.”

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

And yet, not only was Greta Garbo an actress, Garbo brought had with her the quality of being a model long after the last publicity photo of her in studio costume. It was the quality of being a model that is particularly shown by three photographs by Nickolas Muray, whether it is an ebullient Greta Garbo, a pensive, or longing Greta Garbo, or the ethereal Greta Garbo that brings us only to the beginning of her mystery.

Greta Garbo

The Nordic Museum (Nordiska musset) in Stockholm, on Djurgarden, recently shown an exhibition of photos of herself owned by the actress Greta Garbo, which began June 2, 2006 and ran September 3,2006. Present during the exhibition was Derek Reisfield. Included in the exhibition are portraits taken by Clarence Sinclair Bull during the filming of Romance (Romantik, 1930), Mata Hari (1931) and Som du vill ha mig (1932). The year 2007 marked the Centennial of the museum.

”The Truth about Garbo is in pictures.” The year 2006 also marks the online publication by Ture Sjolander of Garbo, his 1971 biography of Greta Garbo. It follows Garbo from her childhood and her home at Blekingatan, in Stockholm, to her third visit to Sweden in 1935, to photos taken while the actress was living as a recluse, her briefly passing the camera and allowing it only a glimpse of herself.

Greta Garbo

And yet, before Garbo,it seems Swedish cinema was established by a director who later came to the United States to direct Lillian Gish in screenplays by Frances Marion, Victor Sjöström.

Subscribe to scottlord
Powered by  movies.groups.yahoo.com


Subscribe to Greta_in_Scandinavian_Magazines
Powered by  movies.groups.yahoo.com
Google Groups Beta
scottlord- Greta Garbo
Visit this group
Google Custom Search
Google Custom Search

– last modified:

Ase Kleveland-Kind Regards

Greta Garbo
Silent Garbo

Greta Garbo

scottlord-Swedish Film: Victor Sjöström to Ingmar Bergman

Robert Olsson and Charles Magnusson to Mauritz Stiller and Victor Sjöström

scottlord-Swedish Film: Victor Sjöström to Ingmar Bergman

Victor Sjöström and Maurtitz Stiller to Greta Garbo in Anna Christie and Edvin Adolphson

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

check out the Greta Garbo swicki at eurekster.com

Photos and or links may be removed or replaced due to design considerations. Please write if you have any html codes you think I should try, streaming video prints of films that can be included in the webpage, banners that you would like added to the webpage and or questions regarding fair use and or copyright. Streaming videos are for the main part thought to be public domain unless otherwise noted; real player videos and posters should be identified through their links. The top banner was designed for Scott Lord by Ulrich in Berlin, Germany. Among the many banners he has designed is the banner for the webpage of the Filmmusuem Potsdam. Greta Garbo images used with the permission of Mia.

Victor Sjostrom, Google Reader – Inga via scottlord + 74 more items

maj 21, 2009 av scottlord

Google Reader – Inga via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_366gddhb5cq&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_358hhxbc6k4&invite=

scottlordgretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_352ffg64whn&invite=

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_367c3fn93g6&invite=

scottlord Svensk Filmhistoria: Greta Garbo in The Divine Woman

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_174cc85zdfj&invite=791809777

Google Reader

-

"Import 070714_220331" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_277dsv85mf9&invite=f4frvdk

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_221cr8dt9ds&invite=j9zk3z

scottlord3

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_319d6rhw9fg&invite=czv9qd5

scottlord: Shared stuff from scott Swedish Film and the Svenska F

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_258dfj4z8cd&invite=406928047

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_235c2xfcxdw&invite=cqf2vn8

google-reader-email-subscriptions-via

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_299gnfnn7mp&invite=dd7pf4q

Greta Garbo: december 2008

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_197fd5tzqdm&invite=htbzfpr

Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_283g3vz9xcp&invite=hc48xbf

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_249fwvpd9cm&invite=dmt6zpx

Google Reader

-

"Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_280ghd37ktf&invite=r6chn8

gretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_336fqwzxjc3&invite=c7h9jd5

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_192cwg4cxhs&invite=d5cdb7t

Google Reader

-

"Your Twitter Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_290fxct8ndw&invite=fsnptq

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 6a

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_365d275qv7z&invite=

scottlord4

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_317c8tf3nf8&invite=d6z6vgc

Google Reader

-

scottlord's starred items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_285dnxcm8hd&invite=960308526

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_248f5rx63hf&invite=gsm87pv

Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_208dqw2bjcf&invite=xxz4rb

Swedish Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_346fphtm2f4&invite=480160080

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_23cz7fww&invite=ckjrjk2

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_345dghh4nfr&invite=csbghjz

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_189drvq8wgw&invite=fxwh6c7

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_24339vxgtgp&invite=f3mt6hm

Google Reader

-

scottlord's shared items

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_222dxjrvsc8&invite=hmckkjv

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_354g2tn95cn&invite=

Swedish and Silent Film social bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_136fhrwzt7z&invite=d2zjw4n

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_345ddv9j6ft&invite=hc29ws8

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_138grh2s9c6&invite=gphz5bg

Bookmarks

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_212g46ggbfr&invite=fqjh5sv

Swedish Silent Film

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_347gm2rbtwq&invite=cj4hcsb

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_247hrff94gz&invite=gq83f2

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_353dhdkhxcv&invite=

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_227dqp8s5fr&invite=ghppc6f

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509a

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_355gvprx2dz&invite=

Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitut

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_232fm87t5dx&invite=hmmnnbf

Victor Seastrom Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_361d22swtcp&invite=61685610

scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: February 2007

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_200cvnxbxdn&invite=fjtftqv

Google Reader

-

"Victor Sjostrom" via scott Swedish Film and th

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_251frzbq3cs&invite=grg2nd3

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 6

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_364www525f5&invite=

scottlord: scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstit: si

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_209fh9wfffd&invite=gs2pzsp

Google Reader – "Ingmar Bergman" via scott Swedish Film and the S

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_256c8fzjshc&invite=ctmrhhp

Google Reader – "swedishfilminstitute" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_224hk6v8gcr&invite=fnc2kzh

scottlord6

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_312fdt8dwcb&invite=g5gtj56

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_360ghvpkjfv&invite=

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_359c2bkqndn&invite=

scottlord: Google Reader

-

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska F

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_292cq9gp9gv&invite=c8xrrzm

Google Reader – scottlord's shared items 509d

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_356g8kmjngq&invite=

scottlord5

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_318d2nbx9cr&invite=k75zd7

Scott Lord: Google Anteckningsblock Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_188s937n6dm&invite=fzt429h

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_206f769shd2&invite=gdcvcv5

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_148gm3wdrgt&invite=gm3jmsv

scottlord: Christina Lindberg

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_183d8b6btcp&invite=g3pzjmz

Google Reader – "scottlordswedishfilm" via scott Swedish Film and

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_257w5vcrzgw&invite=dw8fbgm

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_357zb5dw5cd&invite=

scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet – Google-profil

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_363gg4fwcdh&invite=

Google Reader

-

"Your Twitter Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_287vhd4n3d5&invite=dqp885p

Scott Lord: AltaVista Søk: Swedish Film Ingmar Bergman Eva Dahlbe

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_186d8fpwd4g&invite=d6tx6p2

Google Reader

-

"Your Email Subscriptions" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_271hrwxxwfb&invite=1195602127

Google Reader

-

"Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet"

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_264hhc5q5cw&invite=gxkt5x

Google Reader

-

"svensk+filmhistoria" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_295g42d63g6&invite=184426059

scottlordgretagarbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_325dfrq86mm&invite=h9pwb5

Google Reader

-

"Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_281cv27zwc9&invite=1632075790

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_349cgnhgp7w&invite=d7rph95

Victor Sjostrom

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_362d96t7qc2&invite=

Google Reader – Silent Greta Garbo via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_309gx8tkxnv&invite=ck96wnb

Google Reader – "Silent Greta Garbo" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_261g3zrd8g6&invite=f6q4hpm

Google Reader

-

"silentfilm" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_267ft7pqncv&invite=mm872q

Swedish and Silent Film Blogs RSS

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_140hdfvkqfs&invite=hbghhnn

Google Reader – Victor Sjostrom via scott Swedish Film and the

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_301c6pt9ngd&invite=1260264

Greta Garbo

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_342jzwhvnc7&invite=1226716050

Google Reader

-

"scottlord–beeplog" via scottlord

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhjj8pg6_294dsp6×9rq&invite=j8s68r

Silent Film

maj 19, 2009 av scottlord
Swedish Film Institutescottlord-Swedish Silent Film

All About Swedish Film banner designed for Scott Lord by Ulrich in Berlin, Germany; color tinted by Amy in Southern California

Swedish Film 1909-1917

In part one of the Swedish Silent Film The Outlaw and His Wife (Berg Ejvind och hans hustru, 1918) Victor Sjostrom on screen portays a character that is introduced with an iris out, the previous scene which included secondary characters having concluded with an iris in; he is drinking from an Icelandic stream in medium close shot, the camera then cutting to a wider angle, it photographing him from the waist up to show more of the stream in the background. After a cut in, Sjöström cuts back to the shot, but only briefly, to show that his character is to the right of the screen, in profile, looking at what is offscreen to the left of the screen. Almost on action, he then abruptly cuts to a full shot in which the character has reversed the relation of his look to the side of the frame, his then cutting to a longshot as his character leaves the frame. He cuts to a vignette shot of his character facing the opposite direction that he does in the scene, and then to another accompanying a dialouge intertitle so that it is as though the line of dialouge has been delivered in close shot.

Throughout the rest of part one Victor Sjostrom carries the story forward, it introducing the woman he will marry in a sidelighted, near over the shoulder, near quarter shot, it being that she hires him for a month and then later makes him steward. While part two begins with establishing shots of the exterior, the horizon line often parallel to the top of the frame line ( a wall is later used to show a vertical division of frame as two lovers meet behind it), there is no interruption of continuity between it and part three, the two not linked by any camera device, but the scene is quickly moved to an interior. In part three she asks him to marry her and he tries to decline while declaring his love for her (Sjöström cuts back and forth between their dialouge and a retrospective scene during which he uses iris in and iris out to show ellipsis).

The rest of the film is of their journey together. In part four he cuts from a three quarter full shot of his character facing the right of the screen going towards her to embrace her to a shot of both of them in medium shot, her in his arms while he is facing the left of the screen. Rather than using suture between shot reverse shots, he holds the camera on them during the dialouge and concludes it by cutting to a closer angle of his character having lowered his body and putting his head on her stomach. During the dialouge which beings part seven an expository intertitle accompanies his interpolating a shot which would have been included in a previous scene and the shot from part four of his being near to her is repeated, their dialouge during while snowbound then continuing.

Photographed by Julius Jaenzon, it is Victor Sjostrom’s screenplay , co-written with Swedish screenwriter Sam Ask as the first script that Ask had written, and was adapted from a novel by Johann Sigurjonssonn that had already been brought to the theater. Sjöström had written four hundred letters to his co-star Edith Erastoff, the woman he had married. About the film, Einar Lauritzen wrote, ”But Sjöström never let the drama of human relations get lost in the grandeur of the scenery.” Tom Milne sees the film as being an example of a director articulating ”the sense of space and liberty in the use of landscape which was already one of the distinguishing marks of the Swedish cinema.”

Victor Sjostrom had performed the four act play quickly after it had been published; Eyvind of the Hills had been printed in Danish in 1911 and only later published in Icelandic. Sjostrom had performed the play in Goteborg that same year. The plawright Johan Sigurjonsson explains that it is built around its two principal characters by writing, ”Halla’s nature is moulded on a Danish woman’s soul.”, but oddly he adds something more thematic while dicussing the play by writing, ”In my little garret in Copenhagen, I learned by my own experience the agony of lonliness.” Sigurjonsson relates that it been his correspondence author Bjornstjerne Bjornson that had helped published his first play, Dr. Rung, in 1905. He followed in 1908 with the play The Hraun Farm (Bondinn a Hrauni). Before the screening of Victor Sjostrom’s film The Outlaw and His Wife, Sigurjonsson also published the play The Wish (Onsket), which was printed in 1915.

Par Lagerkvist published the essay Modern Theater (Teater) in 1918, it purporting, and possibly rightly so, that the theater of Ibsen lacked what was needed for then modern audiences. 1919 saw the publication of Par Lagerkvist’s play The Secret of Heaven (Himlens hemlighet). Agnes von Krusenstjerna that year published the volume Helenas fösta karlek.

Bille August has recently filmed an adaptation of Lagerlof’s Jerusalem- for Victor Sjöström and AB Svenska Biograteatern it became The Sons of Ingmar (Ingmarssonera,1918) starring Harriet Bosse and Tore Svennberg with the director and Karin, Daughter of Ingmar (Karin Ingmarsdotter 1920, six reels), starring Tora Teje, Harriet Bosse and Bertil Malmstedt with the director, thier having been filmed by cinematographer Julius Jaenzon and the screenplays to both film’s having had been being Sjöström’s; for Molander, Ingmar’s Inheritance (Ingmarsarvet, 1925) with Marta Hallden and Mona Martensson and To the East (Till Osterland, 1926). Both star Lars Hanson and co-starring Molander. It had been Mauritz Stiller that had visited Selma Lagerlöf in Dalecarli to discuss the filming of adaptations to the novel. Sjöström had in fact hoped to film Liljecrona’s Home rather than Jerusalem. Writing about The Sons of Ingmar, Bengt Forslund notes, ”The most striking change that Sjöström introduces in his screenplay is to treat, daringly, the Kingdom of Heaven as a realistic setting…The scenery provides comic relief without seeming ridiculous. ” Shooting the film mostly on location, ”Sjöström developed dramatic moments that do not have the same intensity in the book” (Forslund). Forslund concludes by writing, ”Otherwise, I still find The Sons of Ingmar less cinematic than The Outlaw and His Wife, less personal in its narrative technique.” Of the actors in the film, he remarks, ”Harriet Bosse seems a little miscast in the role of Brita, which certainly should have been played by an actress ten years younger.”

While writing about the film Wild Strawberries, Jorn Donner notes that Ingmar Bergman’s film is in part a tribute to Victor Sjostrom the director, ”Many scenes have a tie-in with Victor Sjostrom’s work. A smashed watch plays a part in Karin Ingmarsdotter.”

Filmindustri Inc Scandia began in 1918, that year the company filming the first film directed by John W. Brunius, Puss and Boots, (Masterkattan i stovlar), starring Gösta Ekman and Mary Johnson. The film was co-witten by John W. Brunius and Sam Ask. It was also the first film in which actress Anna Carlsten was to appear. The following year Skandia merged with Svenska Bio to team Charles Magnusson with Nils Bouveng to run AB Svensk Filmindustri.

Mary Johnson also that year appeared in the Swedish silent film Storstadsfaror, directed by Manne Göthson and photographed by Gustav A Gustafson. Appearing with her in the film were Agda Helin, Tekla Sjoblom and Lilly Cronwin.

In 1918, the first films to be directed by Sidney Franklin, who would later direct Greta Garbo in the silent film Wild Orchids, appeared in theaters, among them being Bride of Fear (five reels), The Safety Curtain (five reels) with Norma Talmadge, The Forbidden City (five reels) and Her Only Way (six reels), both films also starring Norma Talmadge. That year Fred Niblo, who would later direct Greta Garbo in the silent film The Mysterious Lady as well as Norma Talmadge in Camille (1927, nine reels), also began directing, his films having been The Marriage Ring, Fuss and Feathers (five reels), Happy Though Married (five reels) and When Do We Eat?. Director Paul Powell during 1918 teamed Rudolph Valentino and Marry Warren for the film All Night (five reels).

In 1919, Victor Sjöström wrote and directed His Lord’s Will (His Grace’s Will, Hans nads testamente) from the writings of Hjalmar Bergman. His Lord’s Will (1940), starring Olof Sandborg, Barbro Kollberg and Alf Kjellin and scripted by Stina Bergman was directed by Per Lindberg. During 1919 the novel God’s Orchid, written by Swedish playwright Hjalmar Bergman, would be published, followed in 1921 by the novel Thy Rod and Thy Staff and in 1930 by Jac the Clown.

Swedish Silent FilmAlso in 1919, the Swedish director Ivan Hedqvist directed The Downy Girl. Ett farligt frieri (1919), starring Lars Hanson, Gull Cronvall, Hilda Categren and actress Uno Henning in her first on screen appearance, was directed by the Swedish director Rune Carlsten for Filmindustri Scandia, as was The Bomb (Bomben, Sunshine and Shadow), starring Karin Molander and Gösta Ekman. They were the first two of five films directed by Rune Carlsten to be photographed by cinematographer Raoul Reynols. John W. Brunius that year directed the film The Girl of Solbakken (Synnove Solbakken), based on the novel written by Bjornstjerne Bjornson in 1857, the assistant director with Brunius having been Einar Bruun. Starring Lars Hanson and Karin Molander, it was the first film in which the actresses Ellen Dall, Ingrid Sandahl and Solveig Hedengran would each appear. The film reunited Sam Ask with John W. Bruinus, their both having co-written the script, as with Masterkatten i stovlar. Tytti Soila, in regard to the editing of the film writes, ”The film’s conflict of ideas is condensed in a sequence where there is cross-cutting between a religious revival meeting at Synnove’s home and young people celebrating Midsummer by dancing in a meadow.” That year Brunius also directed the film Oh Tommorow Night(Ah, i morron kvall), photographed by Hugo Edlund. Einar Bruun in 1919 directed the film Surrogatet, with Karin Molander for Filmindustri Scandia, Stockholm. The People of Hemso (Hemsoborna, 1919) was directed by Carl Barcklind, it starring Einar Hanson, Nils Ahren and Hilma Barcklind, as was the film En un mans vag. Hemsoborna was also photographed by cinematographer Hugo Edlund. Danish Film director Robert Dinesen in 1919 filmed the first of two films in Sweden, Jefthas dottar, with Signe Kolthoff, the second having been Odets redskap with Astri Torsell and Clara Schonfeld filmed in 1922.

Griffith directed The Girl Who Stayed at Home ( 1919, six reels), photographed by Bitzer and starring Robert Harron, Carol Dempster, Richard Barthelmess and Clarine Seymour. He also directed Lillian Gish in True Heart Susie (six reels) with Robert Harron and Kate Bruce. Sidney Franklin in 1919 would again direct Norma Talmadge, her starring in the six reel film The Heart Of Wetona.

Conrad Nagel appeared in his first films, The Lion and the Mouse (Tom Terriss, five reels), Redhead and Little Women (H. Knoles, six reels), with Dorothy Bernard, Isabel Lamon and Lillian Hall. Theda Bara was to appear in A Woman There Was, directed by J. Gordon Edwards. She wrote ”How I became a Vampire” for the June 1919 issue of Forum magazine and was interviewed by Olga Petrova for Shadowland Magazine in 1920 and for Motion Picture Magazine in 1922, both instances of one actor interviewing another.

The selcted poems of Carl Gustaf Verner von Heidenstam were published in 1919. The Swedish poet had published the volume Nya Dikterin in 1915. He is the author of historical novel Karolinerna.

Sir Arne’s Treasure (Herr Arne’s pengar 1919, seven reels), with Mary Johnson, co-scripted by Molander, continued Sjöström’s filming of the novels of Selma Lagerlöf, its director Mauritz Stiller. The film was photographed by Julius Jaenzon. Ingmar Bergman has said, ”I think Stiller with his Erotikon and Herr Arne’s Treasure is alot of fun. And his Atonement of Gosta Berling, too, is a fresh, powerful, vital film.” There is an account of Stiller having introduced Greta Garbo to Selma Lagerlöf and an account of Lagerlöf having complimented her on her beauty and her ”sorrowful eyes”. Where Selma Lagerlof and Mauritz Stiller had differred was on adaptation; Stiller perhaps seeing film as more visual, or theatrical, Gösta Werner having written that ”Stiller later regretted preserving the long winded intertitles copied from the novel” (Tytti Soila) while filming Sir Arne’s Treasure, or it may have having had been being that Stiller, as a compliment to Lagerlöf, had begun searching for a connection to the theater that both he and Gustav Molander had studied in Helsinki and similarities within Scandanavian literature. Of the film, Robert Payne writes, ”he employed every trick known to cinema: close ups, dissolves, masks, superimposed images, sudden changes of tempo- a slow dreamy pace for the visionary scenes and an unbelieveably fast pace for the scenes of fighting…The film was tinted, thus giving it a heightened sense of reality.” Author on Scandinavian Film Forsyth Hardy remarked upon the editing of the film by writing, ”It also had a visual harmony, absent from some of the earlier films where the transition from interior to exterior was too abrupt.” Wanda Rothgardt also appears in the film. About the adaptation of novel to film, Kwiatkowski, in Swedish Film Classics, writes, ”Stiller and his scriptwriter Molander simplified the meandering plot of the story, making the narration more consistent and building up tension in a logical way justified by the development of events.” An e-mailed newsletter from Kino video during April of 2006 announced the release in the United States of the Swedish Silent Film Sir Arne’s Treasure on DVD.

Lars Hanson-Swedish Silent Film

The Song of the Scarlet Flower (Sangen om den eldroda blomman, 1919), was to star Lars Hanson and Edith Erastoff. The Song of the Scarlet Flower (1956) with Gunnel Lindblom and Anita Björk was directed by Gustaf Molander. The tinting of the first film provides a contrast between its individual scenes, moods and uses of nature as a background, its narrative following a structure of seperate chapters. Particularly interested in the interrelated components of each film being part of the film in its entirety, David Bordwell writing with Kristin Thompson, also regards the emotion of the spectator during any sequence of a film as being related to the viewing of the film in its entirety; seperate scenes that are tinted belong to the film in its entirety- the film after it has been edited. Narrative and stylistic elements in film form are often interrelated. Long before Bordwell, Raymond Spttiswoode had written, ”The film director is continually analysing his material into sections, which, in a great variety of ways, can be altered to suit his purpose. At the same time he is synthesizing these sections into larger units which represent his attitude toward the world, and reveal the design he finds displayed in it. The analysis is an analysis of structure; of the filmic components which the director discerns in the natural world.”

Lucy Fischer in fact remarks upon the narrative unity with Jacques Feyder’s The Kiss, noting that to view the film as an entirety, the spectator must combine different events from seperate sequences, connecting the plot events centered around Garbo’s character. Oddly, she later discusses the background to narrative as conveying the thematic, not in as much as man’s relationship to nature can depict the emotion inherent within storyline, as often in the films of Stiller and Sjöström, but in that the mise en scene of the silent films of Greta Garbo, in its being dramatic, provides an embellishment of the narrative through its spatial composition of the image- it being Garbo that is crossing the set and sitting into the shot, it being a melodrama taking place within a world in which she can be otherworldly. Raymond Spottiswoode, writing in 1933, as well saw film as being comprised of its component parts. The sequence is seen as a series of shots that taken as part of the film as a whole add to its untiy. Spottiswoode describes there being implicational montage, where the sequences are seen in their entirety, their then containing within them content that has a relation to the film as a whole through implication, a series of shots producing its effect, creating its significance, in combination with other sequences in the film.

Swedish Silent Film Swedish Silent Film

Greta Garbo photographer William Daniels continued his early career as second camerman under the direction of Eric von Strohiem, one film having had been being Blind Husbands (eight reels, 1919), starring Fay Holderness and Francellia Billington, another having been the film The Devil’s Passkey (1920, seven reels), starring Una Tevelyan, Mae Busch and Maud George. Although one of the best films of the decade, the silent Blind Husbands, was concerned with marriage and the marital, one actress that had made several marriage dramas had been Katherine MacDonald. Of those she had appeared in were The Beauty Market (Campbell, 1919, nine reels), The Woman Thou Gavest Me, The Notorious Miss Lisle (1920) and Passion’s Playground (1920). To add to any new look at marriage that was taking place as Hollywood peered through the keyhole into a modernity of what was being shown of the bedroom, DeMille in 1919 directed Why Change Your Husband (six reels), Male and Female (nine reels) with Lila Lee and For Better or Worse (seven reels), his having begun a series of films on marital relations in 1918 with Old Wives for New (six reels), each film scripted by Jeanie Macpherson. Macpherson, who had begun writing screenplays for DeMille with the 1915 film The Captive, starring Blanche Sweet, in 1920 continued with the director by scripting the film Something to Think About (seven reels), starring Gloria Swanson. Fred Niblo directed the film The Marriage Ring (five reels) in 1918. It has been offered that the films of DeMille are not only erotic comedies but reflect the becoming a commodity of matrimony and the reification of married life through the exchange values employed within suture and the syntax of shot reverse shot, the commodification of female sexuality within gendered spectatorship; within a model of the new woman a female subjectivity is constructed that is a result of consumerism. Whether or not the influence is direct, Einar Lauritzen has attributed the success of Mauritz Stiller’s film Erotikon (When We Are Married, 1920), starring Lars Hanson, Tora Teje , Guken Cederborg and Karin Molander, to the films of DeMille. Added to that, in that there is a connection between the marriage dramas of De Mille and von Stroheim and the early film of Ernst Lubitsch, author Kenneth Macgowan having written that ”in a wittier way” than the earlie two directors, Lubitsch had, ”contributed to the delinquency of the screen”, in particular with the silent film The Marriage Circle, in regard to the influence Mauritz Stiller may have had, Birgitta Steene writes, ”They have often reminded foriegn critics of the comedies of Ernst Lubitsch, but actually the elegant eroticism characteristic of both Lubitsch and Bergman finds its source in the works of the Swedish motion picture director Mauritz Stiller.” The film was photographed by Henrik Jaenzon. An emailed newsletter from Kino video during April of 2006 announced the release in the United States of Erotikon on DVD; the film is introduced by author Peter Cowie.

Mauritz Stiller is particularly noted for having directed Sjöström in two comedies for AB Svenska Biograteatern, Wanted A Film Actress,Thomas Graal’s basta film, 1917), with Karin Molander, and Marriage ala mode (Thomas Graal’s first child, Thomas Graal’s basta barn, 1918). Rune Carlsten and Henrik Jaenzon both appeared on screen during Thomas Graal’s Best Film. Molander continued as director and writer of Thomas Graal’s Ward (Thomas Graal’s mindling, 1922), photographed by Adrian Bjurman. Greta Garbo had seen the film Erotikon before her having met Stiller. Erotic comedy was later explored by the Finnish director Teuvo Tulio in his film You Want Me Like This (Sellaisena kuin sina minut balusit, 1944).

Victor Sjostrom-The Phantom CarriageWhen asked about Victor Sjöström, Ingmar Bergman had told Torsten Manns, ”His films meant a tremendous lot to me, particularly The Phantom Carriage (The Phantom Chariot,Korkarlen, 1920, also listed as 1921) and Ingeborg Holm. The former, adapted from a novel by Selma Lagerlöf, directed by Victor Sjöström from his screenplay, has often been compared to the opening symbolic sequence to Bergman’s Wild Strawberries. Bergman has written that while filming that it seemed to him that it soon became ‘Victor’s film’, the film belonging more to the actor than the director, and yet, after Wild Strawberries (Simultronstallet, 1957) Bergman would begin to write films in which ”dialouge and characterizations would take precedence over scenery and locations.” (Cowie). In part, what may account for Bergman’s feeling that the film had become more of a contribution that Sjöström had made rather than one of his own is the structure of the film’s narrative, its use of a protagonist as narrative address-during an interview with Stig Björkman, Torsten Manns and Jonas Sima, Bergman had said, ”Many of my films are about journeys, about people going from one place to another.” Sima had noted shortly before that Wild Strawberries centers around the character portrayed by Victor Sjöström and ”his relation to himself”. Birgitta Steene writes , ”The aim of both The Phantom Carriage and Wild Strawberries is moral: they tell of a change of character in an egotistical old man and his integration into a community of love.” Victor Sjöström in fact was not in the best of health during the filming of Wild Strawberries and reportedly had difficulty remembering lines of dialouge. There were scenes that had been filmed on indoor sets using backscreen projection to accomodate Sjöström.

Sjöström stars in both films. Photographed by Jaenzon, the film also stars Hilda Borgström, Mona Geifer-Falkner, Tore Svennberg. Signe Wirff and Helga Brofeldt also star in the film in what would be their first appearances on the silver screen. Einar Lauritzen wrote, ”The double exposures in the graveyard scenes and in the scenes with the phantom chariot are beautifully executed, and, as always in Julius Jaenzon’s photography, the interplay of light and shadow is superb.” Quoted by the director of the Pordenone Film Festival, Peter Cowie has noted that during the scene, ”Occasionally, as many as four images are superimposed on a single frame.” The Phantom Carriage (Korkarlen) was filmed by Arne Mattsson in 1958.

Danish film director Lau Lauritzen directed five films in Sweden in 1920, En hustru till lans with Karen Winther, Flickorna i Are, with Kate Fabian, Karleck och bjornjakt with Si Holmquist, Vil de vare min kone-i morgen and Damernes ven. Although The President (Praesidenten, 1919), starring Elith Pio and Olga Raphael-Linden, is not distinguished as being remarkable, it is one of the only two that Carl Th Dreyer made in Denmark before his going abroad, his later establishing a small body of work that would be indelible upon filmmaking. His films are disparate stylisticly, differing in their use of technique; Dreyer has been quoted as having remarked upon his having tried to find a style that would have value for only a single film.

In 1920, Greta Garbo would begin watching the silent films of Clara Kimball Young, Charles Ray and Thomas Meighan- it was also that year that she would espy the actor, later to become director, Sigurd Wallen at a performance of his, there also being an account of her having had a brief conversation with the actor Joseph Fischer. Appearing on the screen in Sweden in 1920 in the film Bodakungen (Gustaf Molander) was Franz Envall, who Greta Garbo mentioned in a 1928 Photoplay magazine interview with Ruth Biery. ”Then I met an actor…It was Franz Envall. He is dead now, but he has a daughter in stage in Sweden. He asked if they would let me try to get into the Dramatic School of the Royal Theater in Stockholm.”

The films of Clara Kimball Young were the springboard for scriptwriter Lenore Coffee, whose first films as a screenwriter, The Better Wife (William Earle, 1919,five reels) and The Forbidden Woman (1920) had starred the actress.

Finnish silent film director Erkki Karu directed two films for Suomen Biografi in 1920, both photographed by Finnish cinematographer Frans Ekebom, War Profiteer Kaikus Disrupted Summer Vacation (Sotagubishi Kaiun Hairitty Kesaloma) and Student Pollovaara’s Betrothal (Ylioppilas Pollovaaran kihlaus).

One of the most beautiful silent films ever made by Mary Pickford, Pollyanna (Paul Powell, six reels) was filmed in 1920. The film also stars William Courtleigh. Pickford also that year made the film Suds (five reels) under the direction of John Francis Dillon. The film also stars William Austin. Mary Pickford was portrayed by Swedish actress Agneta Ekmanner in the 1974 teleplay Bakom masker, directed by Lars Amble and based on the play by Hjalmer Bergman. In a film that would almost seem a yardstick for many of the films that would comprise the rest of the silent film era, Douglas Fairbanks starred under the direction of Fred Niblo in the film The Mark of Zorro.

Clarence Brown directed his first film, The Great Redeemer (five reels) with Marjorie Daw and John Gilbert in 1920. Lowell Shermann, who appeared with Greta Garbo in the film The Divine Woman began in film in 1920 with Yes and No (Roy W. Neill, six reels) with Norma Talmadge and in 1921 with The Gilded Lady, (seven reels) Molly O (eight reels) and What No man Knows (six reels). Covergirl for Photoplay Magazine, Norma Talmadge was also that year directed by Roy W. Neill in the film A Woman Gives (six reels). A Daughter of Two World (James Young, six reels) and She Loves and Lies were also to star Norma Talmadge that year. Norma Shearer appeared in films in the year 1920, among them being The Sign On the Door ( Herbert Brenon, seven reels), The Flapper (Alan Crosland, five reels), The Restless Sex (six reels) written by Frances Marion and The Stealers (seven reels, William Christy Cabanne).

That year D. W. Griffith directed Lillian Gish in The Greatest Question (six reels), photographed by G. W. Bitzer. Griffith also directed the films The Idol Dancer (1920, seven reels), with Richard Barthelmess, Clarine Seymour and Kate Bruce and The Love Flower (1920, seven reels), with silent film actress Carol Dempster. The following year Dempster again starred under the direction of D. W. Griffith in the silent film Dream Street. In 1920 Dorothy Gish not only starred in the film Little Miss Rebellion (five reels), directed by George Fawcett, but also had begun filming with the director F. Richard Jones, under whose direction she starred in Flying Pat (1920, five reels), with Kate Bruce, The Ghost in the Garret (1921) and The County Flapper (1922) with Glenn Hunter and Mildred Marsh. Lillian Gish writes about Garbo’s later asking her to introduce her to Griffith, which she did, and of Garbo’s asking her how she should dress. Garbo had said to her, ”It would be nice to have dinner at your house.”

Victor Sjöström wrote and directed The Monastery of Sendomir (The Secret of the Monastery, Kloster i Sendomir, 1920) with Tora Teje, Richard Lund and Tore Svennberg. Photgraphed by Henrik Jaenzon, the film was adapted by Sjöström from a novel by Franz Grillparzev. A screening of the film was offerred by the Norwegian Film Institute on July 17,2005 in the Cinemateket. During 1920 Sjöström also directed Master Samuel (A Dangerous Pledge,Masterman), in which he starred with Greta Almroth and Concordia Selander. Photographed by Julius Jaenzon, it was scripted by Hjalmar Bergman, as was the 1921 film Fru Mariannes friare, directed by Gunnar Klintberg and starring Astri Torsell, Inga Ellis and Aslaug Lie-Eide, the cinematographer to the film having been Robert Olsson. Gunnar Klintberg would continue by directing Astri Torsell in two other Swedish Silent films, The Love Child, with Julia Hakansson, and Lord Saviles brott. The Fishing Villiage (Chains, Fiskebyn) was filmed in 1920 by Stiller and Henrik Jaenzon, it starring Lars Hanson. Appearing in the film was Hildur Carlburg, who that year also appearred in the film The Witch Woman (Prastankan), shot in Sweden by Danish film director Carl Dreyer. Sölve Cederstrand directed his first film, Ett odesdigert inkognito, starring Tage Alquist and Signe Selid, in 1920. The Swedish director John W. Brunius that year wrote and directed both Thora van Deken, starring Gosta Ekman , Ellen Dall and Edvin Adolphson with Pauline Brunius in the title role, and Gyurkoviscarna, photographed by Hugo Edlund and starring Nils Asther, Pauline Brunius and Ragnar Arvedson. Both films were produced by Filmindustri Scandia, Stockholm. They were followed by The Wild Bird (En vindfagel, 1921), in which he starred with Pauline Brunius, Tore Svennberg, Mona Geifer-Falkner and Edvin Adolphson, The Mill (Kvarnen, 1921), starring Helene Olsson and Ellen Dall and photographed by Hugo Edlund, A Fortune Hunter (En Lyckoriddarre, 1921 six reels) starring Gösta Ekman, Mary Johnson, Hilda Forsslund and Greta Garbo, her appearing with her sister Alva Gustafsson in a scene that takes place in a tavern. In 1922 he directed Iron Wills (Harda viljor). Directed for Filmindustri Scandia, Stockholm in 1920, the first three films by Pauline Brunius, De lackra skaldjuren, Ombytta roller and Trollslanden, were also the first three films in which the actress Frida Winnerstrand was to appear.

Rune Carlsten in 1920 wrote and directed A Modern Robinson (Robinson i skargarden) with Mary Johnson. He that year also directed Mary Johnson, with Tora Teje, in the film Family Traditions (Familjens traditioner), which he scripted as well. The film was produced by Svensk Filmindustri

Danish silent film director A. W. Sandberg in 1920 wrote and directed two films for the Nordisk Films Kompagni in which the actress Clara Wieth starred, House of Fatal Love (Kaerlighedsvalen) and A Romance of Riches (Stodderprinsessen), in which she starred with Gunnar Tolnaes. Sandberg also that year directed the film Adrift (Det dode Skib), with Valedmar Psilander, Stella Lind and Else Frolich.

Ivan Hedqvist in 1921 directed the film Pilgrimage to Kevlar (Vallfarten till Kevlaar) starring Jessie Wessel, which he followed in 1924 with Life in the Country (Livet pa landet), photographed by Julius Jaenzon.

In 1921, Pauline Brunius wrote and directed the film Lev livet leende and directed the film Ryggskott. Let No Man Put Asunder (Hogre andamal, 1921) starred Edith Erastoff, her director having been Rune Carlsten. Klaus Albrecht that year directed Lili Ziedner in the film The Bimbini Circus (Cirkus Bimbini). Stiller in 1921 directed The Emigrants (De landsflyktiga) starring Lars Hanson and Ivan Hedqvist and Johan, starring Jenny Hasselqvist, a film co-written with Stiller by Molander from a novel by Juhani Ahos and photographed by Henrik Jaenzon. It is the first film in which Tyra Ryman would appear. Tyra Ryman was introduced to her later costar Greta Garbo in 1922 at PUB by Eric Petschler, who directed both in Luffar-Peter. Writing about another film directed that year by Mauritz Stiller, Tom Milne sees the film Johan as having contributed to the technique and to the look of the film The Bride of Gromdal directed by Carl Th. Dreyer.

Carl Th. Dreyer in 1921 directed the silent film Leaves from Satan’s Book (Blade af Satans Bog).

In the United States during 1921, Mary Pickford continued acting with the silent film Little Lord Fauntleroy.

In 1922, Victor Sjöström wrote and directed the films Love’s Crucible (Vem domer), with Gosta Ekman and Jenny Hasselqvist and Ivan Hedqvist, The Hellship, from a screenplay written by Hjalmar Bergman and starring Matheson Long and Jenny Hasselqvist and Julia Cederblad in the first film in which she was to appear, both films having had been being filmed by Julius Jaenzon. That year Sjöström also directed The Surrounded House (Det omringade huset), starring Wanda Rothgardt and Hilda Forsslund. The Swedish director Gustaf Edgren contributed The Young Lady of Bjorneborg (Froken pa Bjorneborg, 1922), photographed by Adrian Bjurman and starring Rosa Tilman, Elsa Wallin and the actress Edit Ernholm in her first film. Sigurd Wallen that year directed his first film Andessonskans Kalle with Stina Berg and Anna Diedrich, his following it with Andessonskans Kalle pa nya upptag with Edvin Adolphson, the debut film of Mona Martenson. John W. Brunius that year directed A Scarlet Angel (Eyes of Love, Karlekens ogon), photographed by Hugo Edlund. That year Ragnar Ring wrote and directed En Vikingafilm, with Harald Wehlnor and Sigrid Ahlstrom.

Karin Boye, the Swedish poet began publishing in 1922 with the volume Clouds. She continued in 1924 with Hidden Lands and in 1927 with The Hearths. Swedish poet Birger Sjoberg in 1922 published Frida’s Songs.

Writing about the 1922 Finnish Silent Film, Tytta Soila notes, ”Perhaps one might say that the fortune of Suomi-Filmi, and thus the future of Finnish cinema, was established by portraying the lives of two strong female characters: Anna-Liisa and Hannah. Subsequently, many Finnish films were to have a strong female character at the center of the action.”

Director Victor Sjöström left for Hollywood in 1922, upon the completion of the filming of The Hellship. In 1922 Rudolf Valentino was in an early role, starring with Gloria Swanson in the film Beyond the Rocks (Sam Wood); the only existant copy of the film was found recently and the film, readying for distribution in United States during 2005, had its premiere in Amsterdam at the Filmuseum’s Biennale festival. In her autobiography Swanson on Swanson, the actress gives an account of making of the film. ”Everyone wanted Beyond the Rocks to be every luscious thing Hollywood could serve up in a single picture: the sultry glamour of Gloria Swanson, the steamy Latin magic of Rudolph Valentino, a rapturous love story byb Elinor Glyn, and the tango as it was meant to be danced, by the master himself. In the story I played a poor but aristocratic English girl who is married off to an elderly millionaire, only to meet the lover of her life on her honeymoon.” After describing the fun she had off the set with Valentino, with whom she often had dinner, she concludes, ”Several months later he married Natacha Rambova, and from then on he and I saw each other seldom.” Valentino had in 1921 starred in the silent film Camille (Ray C. Smallwood, six reels) with Patsy Ruth Miller and Consuelo Flowerton.

It is only with sincere appreciation for for the Silent Film series aired on Turner Classic Movies on Sunday Nights that the best of luck should be wished to Robert Osborne and Charles Tabesh at their appearing at the screening of silent films- Robert Osborne was present at the San Francisco Silent Film Festival for the July 14, 2007 showing of Camille. The film was included in the Greta Garbo Signature released in 2005 near to the 100th birthday of the actress Greta Garbo along with a section entitled TCM archive: Greta Garbo Silents.

D.W. Griffith in 1922 directed Carol Dempster in One Exciting Night (eleven reels). By then a producer for United Artists, Griffith followed in 1923 by directing Carol Dempster in the film The White Rose with Mae Marsh (twelve reels). Sidney Franklin in 1922 directed the film The Primitive Lover, starring Constance Talmadge. Lon Chaney in 1922 starred in the film Flesh and Blood (five reels). Norma Shearer first appeared in a starring role in 1922 in the film The Man Who Paid (five reels), directed by Oscar Apfel. Rudolf Valentino in 1922 would appear with Wanda Hawley in the film The Young Rajah (Phil Rosen), the screenplay to the film written by June Mathis, who adapted the script from a novel by ames Ames Mitchell. Valentino would also that year appear with Dorothy Dalton in Moran of the Lady Letty (George Melford).

Silent FilmSilent

Filmed in Sweden by Danish silent film director Benjamin Christensen, 1922 saw the release of the long awaited film Haxan (Witchcraft Through the Ages). The film, recently included in the films of Janus Films and in the silent film from Criterion, in the United States, was photographed by Johan Ankerstjerne and written by Christensen, who appears in the film with Ella la Cour, Emmy Schonfeld, Kate Fabian, Elisabeth Christensen, Astrid Holm and Elith Pio. Notably Alice O Fredricks and Tora Teje also appear in the film. In a film that to Sweden was to be its Intolerance, Christensen numerously uses the iris in to punctuate the end of a particular scene and the iris out in the subsequent shot to begin the adjacent scene; he goes so far as to use both during the same shot. Raymond Sptossiwoode remarked upon the fade in and fade out, along with the dissolve and wipe, as being something that was to ”produce a softening effect, an indeterminate space between successive shots”, his delegating it to being ”the mark of the termination of an incident or of a defined period of time”. German director Paul Wegener, two years earlier than Christensen’s film, released a remake of his film The Golem (Der Golem), which he had first filmed in 1915.

Gunnar Hede’s Saga (1922, seven reels), directed by Mauritz Stiller, and photographed by Julius Jaenzon, starring Mary Johnson, Pauline Brunius and Julia Cederblad, is based the novel En Herrgardsaggen by Selma Lagerlöf. Forsyth Hardy on Gunnar Hede’s Saga writes, ”Again there was a distinctive combination of a powerfully dramatic story and a magnificient setting in the northern landscape. It was the first film in which actress Lotten Olsson was to appear.

The King of Boda (Tyranny of Hate, Bodakungen, 1920) was the first film to bear the name of Gustaf Molander as director. It was also the first film to be photographed by cinematographer Adrian Bjurman. The film stars Egil Eide and Wanda Rothgardt. Continuing the filming of the novels of Lagerlöf, he directed Birgit Sergelius and Pauline Brunius in Charlotte Lowenskold (1930). Charlotte Lowenskold is the second in a trilogy of short stories written by Selma Lagerlöf, each of them having the Scandinavian landscape of Varmland as their background. The beginning volume, Lowenskolska Ringen was published in 1925, the third volume, Anna Svard having appeared in 1928. During 1930 Gustaf Molander also directed Frida’s Songs (Frida’s visor), both films having had been being filmed by Julius Jaenzon. Victor Sjostrom had starred with Wanda Rothgart and Gunn Wallgren in the first filming of The Word (Ordet, 1943) under the direction of Molander, the actor Rune Lindstrom having written the screenplay. Victor Sjostrom also acted under Molander’s direction in the films The Fight Goes On (Striden gar Vidare, 1941),in which Sjostrom appeared with Renee Bjorling and Ann-Margret Bjorlin, it having had been being the debut of the actress in film, Det Brinner en Eld (1943), in which Sjöström appeared with Lars Hanson and Inga Tiblad and Kvartetten som Sprangdes (1950). If as though to either to complement or to counter the use of mise en scene and Victor Sjöström’s use of landscape in early Swedish cinema, Molander is a director of the interior scene. Tytti Soila writes, ”Particularly in the melodramas, Molander used the composition of the image with the purpose of showing something essential about the existential situation of the characters. The pictures are ‘tight’ and on the verge of being claustrophobic, as props and other details of the set fill the frame, competing for room with the characters.”

Gustaf Molander’s second film Amatorfilmen (1922), starring Mimi Pollack, was the first film in which the actress Elsa Ebbensen-Thornblad was to appear.

Brunius in 1923 directed the film The Best of All, following it with Maid Among Maids (En piga bland pigor, 1924), photographed by Hugo Edlund, and starring Edvin Adolphson and Margit Manstad. Gustaf Edgren in 1923 wrote and directed the film People of Narke (Narkingarna) photographed by Adrian Bjurman and starring Anna Carlsten, Gerda Bjorne and Maja Jerlström in her first appearence on screen, the director following it in 1924 with The King of Trollebo (Trollebokungen), an adaptation of the 1917 novel scripted by Sölve Cederstrand and photographed by C.A. Söström, the film having starred Ivar Kalling, Weyeler Hildebrand and Signe Ekloff.

Per Lindberg directed his first film in 1923, Norrtullsligan written by Hjalmar Bergman and starring Tora Teje, Egil Eide, Stina Berg, Linnea Hillberg and Nils Asther, as did William Larsson, who directed Jenny Tschernichin, Jessie Wessel and Frida Sporrong in the film Halsingar and Karin Swanström, who directed and starred with Karin Gardtman and Ann Mari Kjellgren in the film Boman at the Exhibition (Boman pa utstallningen) for Scandias Filmbyra and Svensk Filmindustri. Halsingar was also to be the first of many films photgraphed by Swedish cinematographer Henning Ohlson. Per Lindgren that year directed a second film scripted by Hjalmar Bergman, Anna Klara and her Brothers (Anna Clara och hennes broder), it starring Anna-Britt Ohlsson, Hilda Borgström, Karin Swanström, Linnea Hillberg, Hilda Borgström and Margit Manstad in what would be her first appearance on the siler screen. The film was photographed by Ragnar Westfelt. Bror Abelli in 1923 directed his first two films, including the film Janne Modig.

Ragnar Widestedt in 1923 directed Agda Helin and Jenny Tschernichin-Larsson in the film Housemaids (Hemslavinnor), written by Ragnar-Hylten-Cavallius. Froken Fob (1923) was directed by Elis Ellis and photographed by Adrian Bjurman. Sven Bardach photographed his first film in 1923, Andersson, Petterson och Lundstrom, under the direction of Carl Barklind. The film stars Vera Schmiterlow and Mimi Pollock, both of whom were aquaintances of Greta Garbo, Inga Tiblad, Gucken Cederborg and Edvin Adolphson. Fredrik Anderson in 1923 directed En rackarunge, with Elsa Wallin and Mia Grunder. Gustaf V, King of Sweden is listed as being in the film. The film was photographed by Swedish cinematographer Sven Bardach.

Although Victor Sjöström had embarked for the United States to film in Hollywood under the name Victor Seatrom, Danish silent film directors Benjamin Christensen and Carl Th. Dreyer, who both had begun as scriptwriters for Nordisk in 1912, would by 1923 have travelled to Germany, as Urban Gad, Asta Nielsen and Stellan Rye had earlier. Christensen would star in Dreyer’s 1924 film Mikail (Chained) in addition to directing the film Seine Frau, die Unbekannte (1924) while there. Carl Th. Dreyer would direct the films Love One Another (Die Gezeichneten, 1921) and Once Upon a Time (Der Var engang, 1924) with actress Clara Pontoppidan.

Norwegian film director Tancred Ibsen not only worked in Hollywood on the set design of Victor Sjöström’s film Tower of Lies, but also worked on the set design of the film His Hour (1924), directed by King Vidor.

Danish actress Olga d’Org starred in three films for Nordisk Films Kompagni, all of which were directed by A.W. Sandberg, including the 1923 film The Hill Park Mystery (Nedbrudte nerver).

Finnish film director Karl Fager in 1923 brought the film The Old Baron of Rautakyla (Rautakylan Vanha Parooni) to the screen.

John Lindlof in 1924 directed Man of Adventure (Odets man) with Inga Tiblad and Uno Henning and photographed by Gustav A Gustafson. Sigurd Wallen that year directed Inga Tiblad with Einar Froberg in Grevarna pa Svanta, photographed by Henrik Jaenzon. Theodor Berthels in 1924, wrote and directed the film People of the Simlanga Valley (Folket i Simlangsdalen) with Mathias Taube and Greta Almroth and directed the film The Girl from Paradise (Flickan fran Paradiset). Both films were photographed by Swedish cinematographer Adrian Bjurman. Ragnar Ring that year directed Bjorn Mork and Nar millionera rulla. Ivar Kage in 1924 directed Gosta Hillberg and Edvin Adolphson in the film Where the Lighthouse Flashed (Dar fryen blinkar) for Svensk Ornfilm. Rune Carlsten in 1924 wrote and directed The Young Nobleman (Unga greven tar flickan och priset). Hellwig Rimmen that year directed and photgraphed the film Hogsta vinsten.

– last modified:

Swedish Silent FilmSwedish FilmThe Swedish Sphinx

Back to Top

Swedish and Silent Film

Photos and or links may be removed or replaced due to design considerations. Please write if you have any html codes you think I should try or copyright questions. Streaming videos are for the main part thought public domain or are linked to digital copies, unless otherwise noted; posters should be identified through their link. If you are waiting for a letter from the present author, please send a second letter if necessary. It should be noted that multiply.com reproduces Silent Film webpages, and also google video, and that for the complete knowledge of the beauty and excitement of any Swedish or silent film the source webpages should be viewed.

Silent Film

maj 21, 2009 av scottlord

I have invited you to share a Google Site:

Silent Film
https://www.google.com/accounts/NewAccount?followup=http%3A%2F%2Fsites.google.com%2Fsite%2Fscottlordsilentfilm&service=jotspot&reqemail=scottlord.swedishfilm%40blogger.com

After creating your account and responding to the verification email, visit your site at
http://sites.google.com/site/scottlordsilentfilm/


Google Sites are websites where people can view, share and edit information. To learn more, visit http://sites.google.com/

Google Reader – Inga via scottlord

maj 21, 2009 av scottlord

Upplagd av scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet kl. 00:05 0 kommentarer … scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet …

via Blogdigger Link Search for http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlordgretagarbo.html by Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09

Victor Sjostrom
”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

via Greta Garbo on 11/9/07

A Secret Marriage (Ett hemlight giftermal, 1912) Svenska Biografteatern directed by Victor Sjostrom and starring Hilda Borgstrom.

via Victor Sjostrom by scottlord on 11/9/07

Swedish Film

via Blogdigger Link Search for http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlordgretagarbo.html by Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09

Victor Sjostrom
”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

via Greta Garbo on 11/9/07

A Secret Marriage (Ett hemlight giftermal, 1912) Svenska Biografteatern directed by Victor Sjostrom and starring Hilda Borgstrom.

via Victor Sjostrom by scottlord on 11/9/07

Swedish Film

via Blogdigger Link Search for http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html by scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09

Silent Film 

Silent Film
scottlord’s shared items

These items are being shared in Google Reader.

Subscribe in Reader to keep up with newly shared items.

 
Sign in to subscribe

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Black Pirate
The Black Pirate” on Google Video
Aka ”The Black Buccaneer”. ”Seeking revenge, an athletic young man joins the pirate band responsible for his father’s death.” Directed by Albert Parker, written by Jack Cunningham, based on Douglas Fairbanks’ story, 1926. Film in public domain available at Public Domain Torrents.
http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Beloved Rogue (1927)
The Beloved Rogue (1927)” on Google Video
This film is a swashbuckling and fictionalized version of incidences in the life of Francois Villon, the vagabond poet of 15th-century France. It stars John Barrymore in the role of Villon and Conrad Veidt in the role of Louis XI.
http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Eagle
The Eagle” on Google Video
”Vladimir Dubrouvsky, a lieutenant in the Russian army, catches the eye of Czarina Catherine II. He spurns her advances and flees.” Directed by Clarence Brown, written by George Marion Jr., based on Alexander Pushkin’s story, 1925. Film in public domain available at Public domain torrents.

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/27/07

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/28/07

The entire Ingmar Bergman film

read more | digg story

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/6/07

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/19/07


Det Hemmelighedsfulde X (The Mysterious X)
Det Hemmelighedsfulde X (The Mysterious X)” on Google Video
Aka ”Orders Under Seal” or ”Sealed Orders”. ”Det Hemmelighedsfulde X is the story of Lieutenant Van Hauen, a man very concerned to perform his duty, that is to say, make war while his wife makes love with Count Spinelli, a sinister Count with many obscure intentions ; intrigues about secret sealed war orders given to Herr Van Hauen that are revealed to the enemy will put the lieutenant’s honor in question and his physical integrity at stake in a film very well paced and directed, a mixture of spy film, war film and suspense film.” Written and directed by Benjamin Christensen, 1913.

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord12.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/19/07


Robin Hood
Robin Hood” on Google Video
Aka ”Douglas Fairbanks in Robin Hood”. ”Amid big-budget medieval pageantry, King Richard goes on the Crusades leaving his brother Prince John as regent.” Directed by Allan Dwan, written by Douglas Fairbanks, Kenneth Davenport and Edward Knoblock, 1922. Film in the public domain available at Archive.org

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via Blogdigger Link Search for http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/GretaGarbo.html by Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09

Victor Sjostrom
”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet

via Greta Garbo on 11/9/07

A Secret Marriage (Ett hemlight giftermal, 1912) Svenska Biografteatern directed by Victor Sjostrom and starring Hilda Borgstrom.

via Victor Sjostrom by scottlord on 11/9/07

Swedish Film

Swedish Film, Svenska Filminstituet, Greta Garbo, … scottlord-swedish-silent-film-swicki +scottlordVictorSjostrom +silent garbo …

via Blogdigger Link Search for http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html by scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09

Silent Film 

Silent Film
scottlord’s shared items

These items are being shared in Google Reader.

Subscribe in Reader to keep up with newly shared items.

 
Sign in to subscribe

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Black Pirate
The Black Pirate” on Google Video
Aka ”The Black Buccaneer”. ”Seeking revenge, an athletic young man joins the pirate band responsible for his father’s death.” Directed by Albert Parker, written by Jack Cunningham, based on Douglas Fairbanks’ story, 1926. Film in public domain available at Public Domain Torrents.
http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Beloved Rogue (1927)
The Beloved Rogue (1927)” on Google Video
This film is a swashbuckling and fictionalized version of incidences in the life of Francois Villon, the vagabond poet of 15th-century France. It stars John Barrymore in the role of Villon and Conrad Veidt in the role of Louis XI.
http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Eagle
The Eagle” on Google Video
”Vladimir Dubrouvsky, a lieutenant in the Russian army, catches the eye of Czarina Catherine II. He spurns her advances and flees.” Directed by Clarence Brown, written by George Marion Jr., based on Alexander Pushkin’s story, 1925. Film in public domain available at Public domain torrents.

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/27/07

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/28/07

The entire Ingmar Bergman film

read more | digg story

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/6/07

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/19/07


Det Hemmelighedsfulde X (The Mysterious X)
Det Hemmelighedsfulde X (The Mysterious X)” on Google Video
Aka ”Orders Under Seal” or ”Sealed Orders”. ”Det Hemmelighedsfulde X is the story of Lieutenant Van Hauen, a man very concerned to perform his duty, that is to say, make war while his wife makes love with Count Spinelli, a sinister Count with many obscure intentions ; intrigues about secret sealed war orders given to Herr Van Hauen that are revealed to the enemy will put the lieutenant’s honor in question and his physical integrity at stake in a film very well paced and directed, a mixture of spy film, war film and suspense film.” Written and directed by Benjamin Christensen, 1913.

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord12.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/19/07


Robin Hood
Robin Hood” on Google Video
Aka ”Douglas Fairbanks in Robin Hood”. ”Amid big-budget medieval pageantry, King Richard goes on the Crusades leaving his brother Prince John as regent.” Directed by Allan Dwan, written by Douglas Fairbanks, Kenneth Davenport and Edward Knoblock, 1922. Film in the public domain available at Archive.org

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via Blogdigger Link Search for http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html by scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09

Silent Film
scottlord’s shared items

These items are being shared in Google Reader.

Subscribe in Reader to keep up with newly shared items.

 
Sign in to subscribe

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Black Pirate
The Black Pirate” on Google Video
Aka ”The Black Buccaneer”. ”Seeking revenge, an athletic young man joins the pirate band responsible for his father’s death.” Directed by Albert Parker, written by Jack Cunningham, based on Douglas Fairbanks’ story, 1926. Film in public domain available at Public Domain Torrents.
http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Beloved Rogue (1927)
The Beloved Rogue (1927)” on Google Video
This film is a swashbuckling and fictionalized version of incidences in the life of Francois Villon, the vagabond poet of 15th-century France. It stars John Barrymore in the role of Villon and Conrad Veidt in the role of Louis XI.
http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/26/07


The Eagle
The Eagle” on Google Video
”Vladimir Dubrouvsky, a lieutenant in the Russian army, catches the eye of Czarina Catherine II. He spurns her advances and flees.” Directed by Clarence Brown, written by George Marion Jr., based on Alexander Pushkin’s story, 1925. Film in public domain available at Public domain torrents.

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/27/07

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 5/28/07

The entire Ingmar Bergman film

read more | digg story

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/6/07

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/19/07


Det Hemmelighedsfulde X (The Mysterious X)
Det Hemmelighedsfulde X (The Mysterious X)” on Google Video
Aka ”Orders Under Seal” or ”Sealed Orders”. ”Det Hemmelighedsfulde X is the story of Lieutenant Van Hauen, a man very concerned to perform his duty, that is to say, make war while his wife makes love with Count Spinelli, a sinister Count with many obscure intentions ; intrigues about secret sealed war orders given to Herr Van Hauen that are revealed to the enemy will put the lieutenant’s honor in question and his physical integrity at stake in a film very well paced and directed, a mixture of spy film, war film and suspense film.” Written and directed by Benjamin Christensen, 1913.

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord12.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on 6/19/07


Robin Hood
Robin Hood” on Google Video
Aka ”Douglas Fairbanks in Robin Hood”. ”Amid big-budget medieval pageantry, King Richard goes on the Crusades leaving his brother Prince John as regent.” Directed by Allan Dwan, written by Douglas Fairbanks, Kenneth Davenport and Edward Knoblock, 1922. Film in the public domain available at Archive.org

http://www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.html

http://silent-film-swicki.eurekster.com

via blogurl:scottlord.blogspot.com – Google Blog Search by scottlord- Swedish Film and the Svenska Filminstitutet on 3/14/09
Silent Film. Silent Film scottlord’s shared items. These items are being shared in Google Reader. Subscribe in Reader to keep up with newly shared items. Sign in to subscribe. The Black Pirate. via scottlord by lord02141@yahoo.com on

Swedish Erotic Film: Christina Lindberg, Marie Liljedahl – Google Notebook

maj 21, 2009 av scottlord

I've published a Google Notebook named "Swedish Erotic Film: Christina Lindberg, Marie Liljedahl". Check it out at:

http://www.google.com/notebook/public/11282885143046946619/BDQG0SwoQy_vop8Ej

Victor Sjostrom

maj 21, 2009 av scottlord

Victor Sjostrom

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott

victor sjostrom, victor+sjsotrom+swedish+silent+film, victor seastrom, Greta Garbo Victor Seastrom, Victor Sjostrom Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom Swedish Silent Film

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swed…

Victor Sjostrom Greta Garbo, Victor Sjostrom, Greta Garbo Victor Seastrom, Swedish Film, swedish film, silent greta garbo, silent garbo

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom site:www.geocities.com/lord0214…

Ingmar Bergman

Yahoo! Search: Victor Sjostrom (http://www.geoc…

Victor Sjostrom

Filer – Victor Sjostrom | Google Grupper

Victor Sjostrom

sesam.no

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom Google Group

Victor Sjostrom

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swed…

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom | Google Grupper

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom | Google-grupper

Victor Sjostrom

Sesam webbsök (hela webben) – (www.geocities.co…

Victor Sjostrom

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swed…

Victor Sjostrom

del.icio.us/scottlord/victorsjostromgretagarbo

Victor Sjostrom

Sesam webbsök (hela webben) – (www.geocities.co…

silent greta garbo

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swed…

Victor Sjostrom

del.icio.us/scottlord/victorsjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Simpy tag search for victorsjostrom’s Feed

Victor Sjostrom

groups.google.no

Victor Sjostrom

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swed…

Victor Sjostrom

sesam.no

Victor Sjostrom

Sesam webbsök (hela webben) – (www.geocities.co…

Victor Sjostrom

site:www.geocities.com/lord02141/scottlord23.ht…

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom | Google Groups

Victor Sjostrom

Google Reader -”victor-sjostrom” via scottlord

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Google Reader -”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swed…

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom Google Group

Victor Sjostrom

”Victor Sjostrom” via scott Swedish Film and th…

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

groups.google.dk

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom | Google Grupper

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom Berg Ejvind och hans Hustru (The Outlaw and His Wife)

MetaEureka

Leta.se – Sveriges enklaste söksida

Leta.se – Sveriges enklaste söksida

Victor Sjostrom site:www.geocities.com/lord02141/GretaGarbo.html information

victor sjostrom, victor+sjsotrom+swedish+silent+film, victor seastrom

Victor Sjostrom

victor sjostrom, victor+sjsotrom+swedish+silent+film, victor seastrom

Mein Web: Meine Lesezeichen mit dem Tag sjostrom

Google Reader -”victor-sjostrom” via scottlord

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom