Director: William Wyler
Director: William Wyler
Directors: Nick Grindé & David Burton
Directors: Nick Grindé & David Burton
Director: Irving Cummings
Very rare film, and last spotted was in TCM according to this comment. Hopefully the restoration is done if it's played on TCM, especially considering the print was in danger of decomposition in 1977 according to earlytalkiebuffRob
Director: Irving Cummings
Very rare film, and last spotted was in TCM according to this comment. Hopefully the restoration is done if it's played on TCM, especially considering the print was in danger of decomposition in 1977 according to earlytalkiebuffRob
Director: Walter Futter
Director: Walter Futter
Director: Clarence Brown
Director: Clarence Brown
Director: King Vidor
Director: King Vidor
Director: Josef von Sternberg
All very old restoration, but Kino Lorber > Germany Universum > MoC. Kino Lorber Germany Blu-ray has more noise reduction while English version's noise reduction is kept at minimum. MoC has very week encoding and crushed blacks.
Sources:
caps-a-holic on MoC vs Germany
DVDBeaver on Kino Lorber vs MoC
2001 Kino Lorber DVD or 2003 Eureka DVD
Director: Josef von Sternberg
All very old restoration, but Kino Lorber > Germany Universum > MoC. Kino Lorber Germany Blu-ray has more noise reduction while English version's noise reduction is kept at minimum. MoC has very week encoding and crushed blacks.
Sources:
caps-a-holic on MoC vs Germany
DVDBeaver on Kino Lorber vs MoC
2001 Kino Lorber DVD or 2003 Eureka DVD
Director: John Ford
Director: John Ford
Lost, from Wiki:
The only known surviving fragment is a 20 second long clip found in 2023. The large amount of Pre-Code content, which raised alarm even before the Code began to be enforced (in 1934) may have contributed to the film's disappearance as this would have made the film unacceptable for Associated Artists Productions in 1958 when a number of early Technicolor features were transferred to black and white film. The soundtrack, which was recorded on Vitaphone disks, survives intact.
Lost, from Wiki:
The only known surviving fragment is a 20 second long clip found in 2023. The large amount of Pre-Code content, which raised alarm even before the Code began to be enforced (in 1934) may have contributed to the film's disappearance as this would have made the film unacceptable for Associated Artists Productions in 1958 when a number of early Technicolor features were transferred to black and white film. The soundtrack, which was recorded on Vitaphone disks, survives intact.
Director: Michael Curtiz
Director: Michael Curtiz
Director: Charles Brabin
Streaming previously available on TCM
Director: Charles Brabin
Streaming previously available on TCM
Director: Alan Crosland
Director: Alan Crosland
Director: Al Christie
Unofficial DVD
Director: Al Christie
Unofficial DVD
Director: Charles Reisner
Director: Charles Reisner
Director: Sidney Lanfield
UCLA has 35mm restoration available see https://www.cinema.ucla.edu/events/2017/03/18/mamba-cheer-up-smile
Director: Sidney Lanfield
UCLA has 35mm restoration available see https://www.cinema.ucla.edu/events/2017/03/18/mamba-cheer-up-smile
Director: F. W. Murnau
MoC seems to be similar to Carlotta, but Carlotta doesn’t have EN subtitles and really really hard to find
MoC: http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film2/DVDReviews49/city_girl_blu-ray.htm
Carlotta: http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film3/blu-ray_reviews53/f.w._murnau_boxset_blu-ray.htm
Director: F. W. Murnau
MoC seems to be similar to Carlotta, but Carlotta doesn’t have EN subtitles and really really hard to find
MoC: http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film2/DVDReviews49/city_girl_blu-ray.htm
Carlotta: http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film3/blu-ray_reviews53/f.w._murnau_boxset_blu-ray.htm
Director: Ted Wilde
Director: Ted Wilde
Showing 20 of 651 films



















