Vintage Movie Resources
Alice Joyce — Alice for Short (1917) 🇺🇸
Virginia Valli — From Stenography to Stardom (1918) 🇺🇸
Warner Oland — A Highbrow Villain from the Arctic Circle (1918) 🇺🇸
Ralph Ince — Shopping for Human Beings (1921) 🇺🇸
After diligently searching for exact types for his production, Ralph Ince has decided that a bit of faded silk is not half as hard to match as human characteristics, or mental outlook.
Those Cowless Cowboys (1921) 🇺🇸
Oh, those cowless cowboys of the motion pictures! Those guys that go ‘round all dolled up like a merry-go-round in the cowboy scenery, but who never seem to have any work to do!
Warner Oland — The Most of Every Moment (1936) 🇺🇸
Warner Oland and his wife prove living can be a fine art — even in the motion picture colony
Films in the Flowery Land (1918) 🇺🇸
The appeal of the Japanese movie poster is not a subtle one; it comes right out and picks you off your feet. It is as large as the side of a house, and embodies every color in the artist's paintshop.
Watterson R. Rothacker — A Specialist in a Fine Art (1918) 🇺🇸
Isabel Jewell — Only A “Bit” Girl (1936) 🇺🇸
Only A “Bit” Girl — But Isabel Jewell sees Utopia just ahead
Basil Rathbone — He Resents Being Typed (1936) 🇺🇸
Can Basil Rathbone escape playing villains?
Anita Louise — Beautiful Veteran (1936) 🇺🇸
Fred Stone — “A Danged Good Actor” (1936) 🇺🇸
Saga of Signe Hasso (1943) 🇺🇸
Richard Talmadge — Could a Broken Neck Stop Him? Not Much! (1927) 🇺🇸
Frank Hopper — One Chance in Thousands (1927) 🇺🇸
Frank Hopper had been hearing for years that he looked like Theodore Roosevelt, but it took a stranger to see in that resemblance a chance for him to play the great American in “The Rough Riders.”
The Biography of a Film — From Studio to Dead Storage Vault (1922) 🇺🇸
The Japanese Carpet of Bagdad (1922) 🇺🇸
“The Japanese Carpet of Bagdad” is the fourth article in Film play’s series, “Around the WorId with the Movies.”
Walter Huston — He Rôles His Own! (1931) 🇺🇸
“I’m an actor,” says Walter Huston — but he doesn’t ‘act’
Claire Luce — Hollywood’s ‘Gone’ on the Luce! (1931) 🇺🇸
Claire Luce, New York’s dancing daughter, makes the film’s Gold Coast Wake Up and Dream
