Smouldering Fires (Silent)
Smouldering Fires (Silent)
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Called "a beautifully acted and directed film that is human, underplayed, and unobtrusively cinematic" by historian William K. Everson, Smouldering Fires is an overlooked silent masterpiece from director Clarence Brown. In the coming years, he would make Greta Garbo a star in the States with Flesh and the Devil (1926) and A Woman of Affairs (1928). After showing Hollywood Garbo could talk in Anna Christie (1930), Brown would craft some of the best films of the 1930s and 40s, including A Free Soul (1931), Anna Karenina (1935), The Human Comedy (1943), National Velvet (1944) and The Yearling (1946). Pauline Frederick was a star on Broadway, and had not been in a successful motion picture since 1920's Madame X. She suffered from massive stage fright during the making of Smouldering Fires, but pulled through with the help of Brown. Years later he would cast her as Joan Crawford's mother in This Modern Age (1931). Laura La Plante is best known for the "old dark house" thriller The Cat and the Canary (1927).
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