A handful of pages on the LBS website have been added or updated.
Recently added to the site are scans of a vintage issue of the Illustrierter Film-Kurier and a French Campaign Book, as well as a page from the 1930 Census Document. Also recently revised are pages devoted to Life & Times and Cuban Matchboxes.
Recently signed up with Netflix. One of the first films I rented was Sally of the Sawdust
(1925), starring W.C. Fields and Carol Dempster. Alfred Lunt also had a
part. It was directed by D.W. Griffith. This film wasn't bad, and there
are some memorable moments. Interestingly, there is a reference to the
"old army game."
On imdb, there is a long write up about the film. The reviewer notes that "Sally of the Sawdust
was first introduced to television as part of the 13-week series on
public television's 1971 presentation of THE SILENT YEARS, hosted by
Orson Welles, which was, by this time, the only known surviving silent
movie to feature Fields." What about the following year's It's the Old Army Game, with Louise Brooks? Was that film thought lost then?