Vintage Movie Resources
Raymond Hackett — The Lawyer for the Defense (1929) 🇺🇸
Nina May — A Jungle Lorelei (1929) 🇺🇸
Nina Mae McKinney is the greatest acting discovery of the age, and I’ll say she certainly acts with every fiber.
Note: This text was published in 1929 and some readers might find some of the African American stereotyping offensive.
Why Don't They Star? (1929) 🇺🇸
Bill Powell — As He Is (1929) 🇺🇸
A brilliant resume of the character and career of one of the most adroit and sure-fire stars.
David Rollins — Oh, Davie, Behave! (1929) 🇺🇸
David Rollins, at twenty, hasn't quite found himself and is undecided whether to be whimsical, or aloof and mysterious, but until he does decide he succeeds in being thoroughly engaging and rather touchingly adolescent.
Alice Joyce — She Acts When She Chooses (1929) 🇺🇸
What's Become of Them? (1929) 🇺🇸
May McAvoy — What the "Mc" in McAvoy Means (1927) 🇺🇸
May, of the McAvoy clan, has a strong whiff of Scotch in her ancestry and proves it by driving shrewd bargains for her professional services, to the amazement of those who believe her to be just a sweet little thing.
Dorothy Mackaill — Following the Blue Print (1927) 🇺🇸
Tim McCoy — Born to the West — and East, Too (1927) 🇺🇸
Lloyd Hughes — Just an Average American (1927) 🇺🇸
You could meet Lloyd Hughes anywhere, for there are a million like him in this U. S. A. of ours. Perhaps that is why the fans like him so well.
James Hall — You Never Can Tell (1927) 🇺🇸
Sid Saylor to Play in Stern Comedies (1926) 🇺🇸
"Metropolis" Likely to be Sensation (1926) 🇺🇸
Lloyd Hamilton — A Flyer in Art (1923) 🇺🇸
The Tragedy of Mary Miles Minter (1923) 🇺🇸
The story of the screen child who wasn't allowed to grow up — until a murder lifted her from stunted youth to dazed womanhood.