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Cinema Europe - The Other Hollywood

Cinema Europe - The Other Hollywood

List Price: $49.99
Your Price: $44.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Superb Final Effort...
Review: Not much to add to the above except to say "magnificent" and wonder how Brownlaw and Gill could track down so many rare clips! One only wishes it was longer. Grab the DVD version if you can (cheaper too), although the tapes look wonderful. A must in either format!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Superb Final Effort...
Review: Not much to add to the above except to say "magnificent" and wonder how Brownlaw and Gill could track down so many rare clips! One only wishes it was longer. Grab the DVD version if you can (cheaper too), although the tapes look wonderful. A must in either format!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A revelation
Review: This is the best documentary on early film I have ever seen-- a wonderful documentation of the parallel film-industries in the major European countries, but beyond that, a lush, transporting showcase for silent film restored to a state so like new as to make no difference. My favorite was the Swedish segment, since these films were entirely unseen by me-- Sjostrom and Stiller filmed native landscapes voraciously, and with immediate apprehension of the screen's epic essence. But Brownlow, as useful a fanatic as film studies contains, lets his footage do his arguing, in support of his belief that the first three decades of film-making contained its greatest achievements. If you've never applauded a videotape you were watching alone, this could be your initiation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant documentary on early film
Review: This six-part documentary is created for serious students of film, as European silent pictures would be unfamiliar (and uninteresting) to most casual viewers. The six-hour running time can also be a deterrent. But, for those who are willing to partake of this journey, it is extremely well done. An off-screen Kenneth Branagh, bridging the material to me as an American viewer, narrates each segment. And the remastered quality of the selected scenes is startling considering most have been forgotten, lost or destroyed.

The first episode, entitled WHERE IT ALL BEGAN introduces the series and discusses the first movies and how they were affected by the onset of World War I. The second episode, PROMISED LAND focuses on hour on the Swedish impact on cinema. Then they discuss German expressionism in Part 3, THE UNCHAINED CAMERA. That is followed by the French contributions in THE MUSIC OF LIGHT, Part 4. Part 5 OPPORTUNITY LOST, reveals British filmmaking as sub par and only shows promise when they stylistic borrow from Germany. Alfred Hitchcock is also featured. END OF AN ERA chronicles the arrival of sound film and how it affected all the involved countries as well as the onslaught of World War II.

CINEMA EUROPE is a wonderful essay on silent European films but it can be a long journey with some repetition. But, many of the clips are marvelous and the musical reconstruction is great. The DVD has no special features beyond an episode scene selection.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Silent pictures with a European accent.
Review: This six-part documentary is created for serious students of film, as European silent pictures would be unfamiliar (and uninteresting) to most casual viewers. The six-hour running time can also be a deterrent. But, for those who are willing to partake of this journey, it is extremely well done. An off-screen Kenneth Branagh, bridging the material to me as an American viewer, narrates each segment. And the remastered quality of the selected scenes is startling considering most have been forgotten, lost or destroyed.

The first episode, entitled WHERE IT ALL BEGAN introduces the series and discusses the first movies and how they were affected by the onset of World War I. The second episode, PROMISED LAND focuses on hour on the Swedish impact on cinema. Then they discuss German expressionism in Part 3, THE UNCHAINED CAMERA. That is followed by the French contributions in THE MUSIC OF LIGHT, Part 4. Part 5 OPPORTUNITY LOST, reveals British filmmaking as sub par and only shows promise when they stylistic borrow from Germany. Alfred Hitchcock is also featured. END OF AN ERA chronicles the arrival of sound film and how it affected all the involved countries as well as the onslaught of World War II.

CINEMA EUROPE is a wonderful essay on silent European films but it can be a long journey with some repetition. But, many of the clips are marvelous and the musical reconstruction is great. The DVD has no special features beyond an episode scene selection.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superb historical documentary on European silent films!
Review: Why is it that the British always produce the best silent film documentaries? Thames Television produced the best documentary ever on American silent films, "Hollywood: A celebration of the American silent film," and now Great Britain has followed that with the equally fine "Cinema Europe: The other Hollywood." The British obviously have the best grasp of film history, or at least know all the best people to consult. This is ultimately an international effort, created with the active cooperation of film historians and archives from around the world.

This is a brilliant and well-organized piece of work. It's broken down by different countries and their respective specialties; I found the episodes dealing with French, German, and Swedish films to be especially interesting. (I agree with another viewer, however, that Russia's exclusion is puzzling). The French section convinced me that I had to see Abel Gance's "Napoleon," and I'm extremely glad that I did. It's one of the most astonishing and passionate films I've seen to date, a true eye-opener.

Like the "Hollywood..." documentary, this one features great film clips and interviews with people who were instrumental in the making of many of these films.

This is a must for anyone interested in silent films or the origins of the cinema. This was such a marvelous, exciting period in which everything was new and few things were viewed as impossible, so experimentation and creativity flourished. The multiculturalism of the film industry back then is sorely missing today (since foreign accents didn't matter in silent films, casts and crews were often multinational). This documentary does a fine job of recapturing that heady sense of exhilaration, the international sharing of ideas, and the pioneering spirit. It's a gem!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superb historical documentary on European silent films!
Review: Why is it that the British always produce the best silent film documentaries? Thames Television produced the best documentary ever on American silent films, "Hollywood: A celebration of the American silent film," and now Great Britain has followed that with the equally fine "Cinema Europe: The other Hollywood." The British obviously have the best grasp of film history, or at least know all the best people to consult. This is ultimately an international effort, created with the active cooperation of film historians and archives from around the world.

This is a brilliant and well-organized piece of work. It's broken down by different countries and their respective specialties; I found the episodes dealing with French, German, and Swedish films to be especially interesting. (I agree with another viewer, however, that Russia's exclusion is puzzling). The French section convinced me that I had to see Abel Gance's "Napoleon," and I'm extremely glad that I did. It's one of the most astonishing and passionate films I've seen to date, a true eye-opener.

Like the "Hollywood..." documentary, this one features great film clips and interviews with people who were instrumental in the making of many of these films.

This is a must for anyone interested in silent films or the origins of the cinema. This was such a marvelous, exciting period in which everything was new and few things were viewed as impossible, so experimentation and creativity flourished. The multiculturalism of the film industry back then is sorely missing today (since foreign accents didn't matter in silent films, casts and crews were often multinational). This documentary does a fine job of recapturing that heady sense of exhilaration, the international sharing of ideas, and the pioneering spirit. It's a gem!


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