Tempest (Silent)
Tempest (Silent)
Available in stock
Tempest was the next-to-last silent feature for "The Great Profile", John Barrymore. Disappointed with his prior film, The Beloved Rogue (1927), he decided to tone down his customary histrionics for his portrayal of Ivan Markov. Except for a sequence in which Markov goes mad in solitary confinement, Barrymore succeeds at giving an understated performance. Louis Wolheim had been an instructor at Cornell University until Barrymore and his brother, Lionel, encouraged him to act. His rough looks were caused by a facial injury during a Cornell football game, and hid a warm, intelligent persona that made him many friends in Hollywood. Two years after Tempest he would essay his greatest role, Katczinsky in All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). The lovely Camilla Horn had recently emigrated from Germany, where she had played Gretchen in F.W. Murnau's masterpiece Faust (1928). Director Sam Taylor is mostly known for his comedic work with Harold Lloyd, including Safety Last! (1923) and The Freshman (1925). The sumptuous sets by William Cameron Menzies won Best Art Direction at the first Academy Awards in 1928.
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