Vintage Movie Resources
Pull Hasn’t Helped Them At All (1928) 🇺🇸
Richard Cromwell — The Discovery of Dick (1931) 🇺🇸
Another one of those Hollywood romances! Richard Cromwell, an unknown hero, shoots from obscurity to fame in three months
Anita Garvin, Frances Lee, Estelle Bradley — Beauty Takes the Bumps! (1928) 🇺🇸
The players you laugh at on the screen probably work harder to cause that laugh, than those who are famous for “emoting.” This is an entertaining story of three of the former.
William Haines — The Young Man of the Hour (1928) 🇺🇸
The Strange Case of Conway Tearle (1928) 🇺🇸
Feeding Film Folk (1925) 🇬🇧
Larry Semon — Simple Semon (1925) 🇬🇧
Screen Scribes (1925) 🇬🇧
James Kirkwood — Unlucky Jim (1925) 🇬🇧
Thus named because he has had more accidents whilst filming than any other screen star. But it doesn’t apply otherwise, he himself smilingly admits
Lois Wilson — Lois Laughs at Men (1925) 🇬🇧
Her attitude to men is of a “gentle maternal, highly amused variety,” declares Vincent de Sola in this character analysis of Lois Wilson.
Charles (Buck) Jones — The Eternal Cowboy (1925) 🇬🇧
The Eternal Cowboy — Otherwise known as Charles (Buck) Jones
Victor Seastrom — The Sombreness of Seastrom (1925) 🇬🇧
Ben Lyon — Footlight or Shadows (1925) 🇬🇧
A newcomer to the movies who prefers the screen to the stage.
John Francis Dillon — Directors I Have Met (1925) 🇬🇧
The Art of Leatrice Joy (1925) 🇬🇧
Once upon a time, a new and quite original little actress drew towards her, by her work, the most discriminating eyes in the motion picture industry. Needless to say she became a star, but it says much for Leatrice Joy that she did not at the same time, cease being an actress.
The Art of Mary Pickford (1925) 🇬🇧
The Art of Douglas Fairbanks (1925) 🇬🇧
The author of this series has chosen his subjects with great deliberation, taking only those whose work seems to him a permanent and essential contribution to the art of the screen.
The Art of Charles Chaplin (1925) 🇬🇧
The Art of Ian Keith (1925) 🇬🇧
Ian Keith has discovered the kinema; when will the kinema discover Ian Keith?
The Art of Bernhard Goetzke (1925) 🇬🇧
Mysterious eyes, holding you, an immobile face, above a sculpturally immobile figure, striking you with an amazing sense of power restrained. The art of Bernhard Goetzke lies not in what he does, but in what he is powerful enough not to do.
Felix the Cat — Me and Pat Sullivan (1925) 🇬🇧
“I guess I was just tickled to death when Picturegoer asked me to write this article.”
Still Photographers — Magic in a Magic City (1925) 🇬🇧
Photographers play a large part in the lives of the movie stars. An artistic photograph is often responsible for the finding and making of a new film player.
