With news sure to delight silent film fans the world over, Criterion has announced an August 24th release date for Three Silents by Josef von Sternberg Collection.
The 3-disc set includes three new-to-DVD titles (above) with stars such as George Bancroft, Emil Jannings and William Powell.
Bonus features and synopses are below.
Retail will be 9.95, but it's available at ClassicFlix.com for only 4.99.
SYNOPSIS:
Vienna-born, New Yorkraised Josef von Sternberg (Shanghai Express, Morocco) directed some of the most influential, extraordinarily stylish dramas ever to come out of Hollywood. Though best known for his star-making collaborations with Marlene Dietrich, Sternberg began his movie career during the final years of the silent era, dazzling audiences and critics with his films dark visions and innovative cinematography.
The titles in this collection, made on the cusp of the sound age, are three of Sternbergs greatest works, gritty evocations of gangster life (Underworld), the Russian Revolution (The Last Command), and working-class desperation (The Docks of New York) made into shadowy movie spectacle. Criterion is proud to present these long unavailable classics of American cinema, each with two musical scores.
Underworld (1927)
Josef von Sternbergs riveting breakthrough is widely considered the film that launched the American gangster genre. George Bancroft is the main heavy, Bull Weed, an urban criminal kingpin whose jealous devotion to his moll, Feathers (Evelyn Brent), gets him into hot water with a rival hood and, ultimately, the authorities. Further complicating matters is the attraction blossoming between Feathers and an alcoholic former lawyer (Clive Brook). With its supple, endlessly expressive camera work, and a screenplay by legendary scribe Ben Hecht (who won a best original story Oscar the first year the awards were given), Underworld solidified Sternbergs place as one of Hollywoods most exciting new talents.
The Last Command (1928)
Emil Jannings won the first best actor Academy Award for his passionate, heartbreaking performance as a sympathetic tyrant, an exiled Russian military officer turned Hollywood actor whose latest parta czarist generalbrings about his emotional downfall.
With its brilliantly realized Russian Revolution sequences, virtuoso camera work, and grandly designed sets and effects, Josef von Sternbergs The Last Command is a gripping silent melodrama that grapples with tumultuous recent history, as well as a striking portrait of one mans increasing blurring of the line between fantasy and reality.
The Docks of New York (1928)
Roughneck stoker Bill Roberts (George Bancroft) gets into all sorts of trouble during a brief shore leave when he falls hard for Mae (Betty Compson), a wise and weary dance hall girl, in Josef von Sternbergs evocative portrait of lower-class waterfront folk.
Fog-enshrouded cinematography by Harold Rosson (The Wizard of Oz), expressionist set design by Hans Dreier (Sunset Boulevard), and sensual performances make this one of the legendary directors finest works, and one of the most exquisitely crafted films of its era.
BONUS FEATURES: