Author Archives for Retro
- September 30, 2017
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- September 30, 2017
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- September 30, 2017
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- September 30, 2017
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- September 30, 2017
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not found on BCDB
- July 9, 2017
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- Comments Off on Links to Resources on Public Domain Films
RetroFilm Vault The largest collection of public domain films in the world.
Wikipedia
Pratt Library
Library of Congress
11 Clasic Films in the Public Domain from Mental Floss
PublicDomainMovies.org
Public Domain Information Project
- July 9, 2017
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- Comments Off on The Campiest Movies In The Public Domain
Campy movies return us to a time of wild excess, favoring a cartoonish, overblown acting style; sub-par FX; cheap sets and costume design. From b-movies about voodoo curses; to radioactive, space-dwelling gorillas; to freaky, druggy exploitation films – campy movies are not without their merits.
Check out some of the campiest films of the public domain, to appreciate the overblown performances and general weird wonderfulness!
Plan 9 From Outer Space (1959)
Merriam-Webster dictionary defines the verb form of “camp” as “deliberately exaggerated and theatrical behavior or style,” and also “to behave in an ostentatiously effeminate way,” – both of which could summarize Ed Wood’s entire career. Plan 9 From Outer Space might not be as “effeminate” as some of Ed Wood’s other films, most notably Glen Or Glenda?, but it is overblown and exaggerated, with radioactive, body-stealing aliens; clapboard sets; and a posthumous Bela Lugosi, in his final
- July 9, 2017
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- Comments Off on Public Domain Movies Superheroes and Comic Book Characters
Superheroes and Comic Book Characters
Before Marvel and DC Comics were the most trusted revenue generators in franchise filmmaking, superheroes had a long and storied history on the silver screen.
Here is a list of heroes who all made their first big screen appearances as the subjects of their own serials, a popular cinematic form of the late ‘30s and early ‘40s in which a story was told in weekly segments, typically over the course of 12 episodes or so.
Most of these heroes shortly found their way from the serial format into feature-length films and then eventually into television series. These icons have a way of growing with the times, which is why we still know them today and can still catch them on big screens across the nation.
Flash Gordon (1936-55)
As some of the most technically proficient and visually captivating live-action serials of this period, it is easy to imagine a young