Hollywood - Ep 2: In The Beginning

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 84

  • @andymassingham
    @andymassingham 2 года назад +109

    A fascinating footnote; Narrator James Mason actually owned the Buster Keaton mansion he mentions in this episode during the 1950’s. One day Mason noticed a door at the back of a gardening shed on the property. Curious, he opened it and to his astonishment discovered dozens of film cans containing some of the only existing prints of Keaton’s features and shorts. The troubled comic genius had left them there in the wake of his divorce and loss of his property. Some of the films were already decomposing and thankfully Mason promptly turned them over to film preservationists which eventually led to Keaton’s late renaissance and celebration of his work.

    • @shannonsmith297
      @shannonsmith297 Год назад +4

      Amazing

    • @leolyon2373
      @leolyon2373 7 месяцев назад

      Wonderful story. Thank you. From the Bronx.

    • @JamesHanglin
      @JamesHanglin 6 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing this valuable piece of information 😌

    • @bencheshire
      @bencheshire 5 месяцев назад

      A lovely story

    • @Nigelsmom2136
      @Nigelsmom2136 8 дней назад

      Thank God he looked in that shed. Keaton was a genius and I'm glad the films were saved.

  • @edwardmarks4293
    @edwardmarks4293 Год назад +58

    After watching this series for the third time, I thought it would be a good place to tell my personal Lillian Gish story. When I was a young adult (in the 1970s) I was one of the year round workers at H & R Block in Santa Barbara. One day an older woman comes in, pulls out an IRS notice from her hand bag and asks for help in dealing with it. I take the notice and see her name...Lillian Gish. I know I was a bit off-center (and still am) a teenage boy in the '70s enamored by old movies/Hollywood. I read the notice and gave her some advice. It was no big deal, but, like anything from the IRS, something not to be ignored. She must have noticed my recognition of her name and asks if I knew who she was. 'Yes, Miss Gish", I said.
    Her response (I'm paraphrasing a bit) "I want to give you some advice. I spent a lifetime working hard and making a name for myself. Now, here I am. An old lady with plenty of money and not enough health or friends to really enjoy life. It's important to succeed in life, but, don't get so wrapped up in your career that you miss enjoying the good things while you can.' One of my favorite memories.

    • @alecsiegrist6277
      @alecsiegrist6277 Год назад +4

      Beautiful quote

    • @ardiffley-zipkin9539
      @ardiffley-zipkin9539 Год назад +5

      Well said. I agree. One of my managers told me that no one wishes that they had spent more time at work in their declining years or death bed. I worked hard at my career but also enjoyed my vacations, travel, family and married my best friend, Dr Dan. Balance is the key.

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 2 года назад +32

    James Mason had the PERFECT voice for narrating this series!

  • @katmolina2627
    @katmolina2627 2 года назад +22

    I remember watching this on cable in the early 80's. Even as a teenager I loved this series!🤩

  • @ciaraskeleton
    @ciaraskeleton Год назад +10

    I'm so Fascinated by the history of film making. It is wild to see how they just popped up studios and weathered each storm just to create art! I know that back then had its atrocities but I would love to have been around to see the beginning and then crystallisation of the industry. Blows my mind.

  • @Nick1981
    @Nick1981 3 года назад +46

    I cannot believe there's not more views on these, I love the whole set, these are so well done, and you actually hear from the ppl who lived then.

    • @davidmccarthy4690
      @davidmccarthy4690 2 года назад +4

      Unfortunately there is so much available on RUclips that it’s easy to overlook excellent programs I myself only became aware of this series as a recommendation then couldn’t remember the exact name and had to keep searching until Eureka!

    • @LathropLdST
      @LathropLdST Год назад

      I hope there are not a lot of views. Keeping this treasure for the few of us who can appreciate it, is fine.
      The disgraceful woke tr@$h of today, do not deserve illumination about the times past.

  • @Warped9
    @Warped9 Год назад +11

    This series really should be remastered and made available on DVD and/or BluRay.

    • @mrblobby7864
      @mrblobby7864 7 месяцев назад

      Probably would be too expensive to licence all the movie footage for a release that would sadly have very niche appeal.

  • @DerbyKnowledge93
    @DerbyKnowledge93 Год назад +5

    Great series, I have watched multiple times

  • @alecwilliams7111
    @alecwilliams7111 Год назад +10

    This is an excellent documentary series. It's easy to forget that these pioneers created one of the greatest American industries of all time, plus the jobs, payrolls, and taxes that go with that. They also created the ultimate American art form, a fact which helped make America dominant in the 20th century. It is hard to over estimate the importance of the movies.

    • @bostonblackie9503
      @bostonblackie9503 Год назад +1

      The only true US art form is Jazz. People were making movies all over the world and were succeeding the US. The turn around came with WWI.

  • @emilys3458
    @emilys3458 2 года назад +14

    Agnes DeMille is simply charming in this. So eloquent and descriptive and her background as a dancer is obvious in her movement. Shes wonderful!!!

    • @ciaraskeleton
      @ciaraskeleton Год назад +2

      I thought this too! She is so eloquent and graceful. Something so captivating about her!

    • @greengardengreen6666
      @greengardengreen6666 Год назад +1

      Agnes DeMille, what a grand dame, I love the way how she described the Hollywood Hills, about the wild flowers, the nature, the natural beauty the sunshine. How I wish I was there during those early years.

    • @bobbyantonelli7978
      @bobbyantonelli7978 6 месяцев назад +2

      I feel so much the same way you do about Agnes DeMille and the way she talks about the wild flowers and how you can just imagine what it was like when the land was so underdeveloped and so beautiful and I just wish I could have been there!

  • @laurasedor4641
    @laurasedor4641 4 года назад +21

    This is amazing, thank you for putting this online

  • @SrAJones-ns7sx
    @SrAJones-ns7sx 2 года назад +9

    Always loved the variations of the score....thank you for posting!

  • @barbaraflores3506
    @barbaraflores3506 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for sharing these fantastic and exqusite...footage! The fabulous Hollywood, of day's gone by. What a beginning. All those Artist's...making it possible! ❤😀👍🇺🇸

  • @amandawhiteley6737
    @amandawhiteley6737 2 года назад +10

    2 silent films I own are Ben Hur with Ramon Navarro. I have also Metropolis

  • @CrustyUgg
    @CrustyUgg Год назад +1

    I've watched these 13 episodes or however many there are quite a few times now. I love it

  • @janets9179
    @janets9179 2 года назад +13

    California used to be an amazing place.

  • @Linda-pw8gx
    @Linda-pw8gx 2 года назад +4

    Very enjoyable! Thank you!

  • @maryoleary5044
    @maryoleary5044 5 месяцев назад +1

    28:23 Well Done Teddy!
    🐶😃
    (All the poor elephants - they look so sad 😔)

  • @goldenager59
    @goldenager59 2 года назад +6

    Such a delightfully enticing time and place to be alive, in bucolic rural Hollywood before it became an "industry town", where a colony of independent filmmakers (much like a grand extended family of thinkalikes) played with an exciting new art form to mainly please themselves (not that there was ever a time when it wasn't a strenuous and nerve-racking endeavor, of course) and hopefully make _mucho dinero_ in the process. Such a shame that the products of those days are mostly lost to us now. But I suppose that's our blinkered Yankee outlook for you. 😕 😎

  • @stephenoconnor9904
    @stephenoconnor9904 2 года назад +2

    A Fasinating into the look and transformation of early Hollywood, Great Viewing.

  • @here_we_go_again2571
    @here_we_go_again2571 4 месяца назад

    It must have been fascinating to work in the first films in California, as new ideas were being tested. You were living and working
    on the edge of the wilderness with others who were enthusiastic about the work.

  • @FionnMcCrystal
    @FionnMcCrystal 8 месяцев назад +1

    Mountbatten had already been assassinated by the IRA by the time this episode had aired. Cool bit of trivia

  • @richardmills1505
    @richardmills1505 2 года назад +3

    With this installment, I'm subscribing to this channel! 👍🙏

  • @anthnee1
    @anthnee1 3 года назад +5

    Fascinating!

  • @FionnMcCrystal
    @FionnMcCrystal 8 месяцев назад +2

    Does anyone know the song used at 38:39? I have heard it before on an old tv show

  • @Jonathon1031
    @Jonathon1031 9 месяцев назад

    These are so great

  • @thinkaboutit3366
    @thinkaboutit3366 Год назад +1

    Th u for this education in film entertainment 🎩

  • @mjohnson66
    @mjohnson66 3 года назад +10

    Can anyone identify the excerpt of music which starts at timestamp 25:30? I am sure it is from a classical piece rather than part of the original music written for this series by Carl Davis. Would love to find it and listen to the entire piece.

    • @pennyburns4425
      @pennyburns4425 3 года назад +1

      I think the piece of music you refer to is from the 2nd half of ' Scherazade ' by Rimsky-Korsakov.

    • @HOE68YEN
      @HOE68YEN Год назад +1

      It’s the Bacchanale from Saint Saens opera Samson & Delilah.

    • @gunterangel
      @gunterangel 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@HOE68YEN
      Coincidentally in 1908 Saint Saens became also the very first famous composer, who would write an original orchestra music for a silent movie, named
      "L'Assasinat de duc de Guise', that's his opus 128.
      So with some right one could call him "the father" of all film composers and real fim music.

  • @stephenoconnor9904
    @stephenoconnor9904 2 года назад +1

    A Little hard to understand, but , Facinating Vewing, none the less.

  • @marine4lyfe85
    @marine4lyfe85 11 месяцев назад

    What a delightful woman Colleen Moore was!

  • @macarenahernandez2839
    @macarenahernandez2839 Год назад +1

    Amazing episode 😍 does anybody know whats the name of the song played when flaming youth" is mentioned? Min 38, please 🙏

  • @bobgreystoke316
    @bobgreystoke316 2 года назад +12

    I was born way too freaking late.

  • @rahmmason2159
    @rahmmason2159 Год назад +2

    I have all 13 episodes on VHS! Where could I find a clean VCR to watch them?

    • @marine4lyfe85
      @marine4lyfe85 11 месяцев назад +2

      Get them transferred to dvd. There are places that do that.

  • @sandy3482
    @sandy3482 Месяц назад

    simple fantastic

  • @angelinasamson6996
    @angelinasamson6996 3 года назад +6

    I wonder what they would think of the cameras that we have these days

    • @onesunnyday5699
      @onesunnyday5699 2 года назад

      Witchcraft 😅

    • @NuGanjaTron
      @NuGanjaTron 2 года назад +6

      I wonder what they would think of the nondescript, untalented "actors", shitty scripts and endless, idiotic comic book sequels we have these days. De Mille and the early Hollywood greats must be turning in their graves if they saw the formulaic garbage now being cranked out of Tinseltown. That shite will certainly _not_ be worth preserving 100 years from now.

  • @SaraiSantana-ei8vq
    @SaraiSantana-ei8vq 8 месяцев назад +1

    Who is the girl who dances next to the man with the hat at minute 1:31 - 1:33

  • @5.56_Media
    @5.56_Media 3 года назад +10

    These are the end times

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 2 года назад

      What are talking about, dummy? You're not making sense at all! 😣😡

  • @mauriceschannel1945
    @mauriceschannel1945 2 года назад +2

    0:47 what’s this song called?!?!?

  • @Sunfried1
    @Sunfried1 2 года назад +2

    Lord Mountbatten was assassinated in the late Seventies. I'm guessing this doc was made around that time

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 Год назад +2

      He died in 1979 in that bombing of the boat that he was aboard on that the IRA(Irish Republican Army) claimed credit for.

    • @FionnMcCrystal
      @FionnMcCrystal 8 месяцев назад

      I have just left a comment about this. He had already died by the time this episode had aired. Cool bit of trivia

  • @marcdelente2456
    @marcdelente2456 2 года назад +4

    Quand ont pensent qu'avec l arrivée du parlant des milliers de films du muet seront détruits . Le style de films qui sera relativement conservé seront les burlesques d autres aussi mais la majorité seront un peu près tout les genres heureusement ils en a qui seront conservés .

  • @onesunnyday5699
    @onesunnyday5699 2 года назад +4

    When was this originally filmed? Surely all of these people are long gone by 2017, that's more than a century past.
    Also the font & filming looks like the 70s

    • @michellereichardt3323
      @michellereichardt3323 2 года назад

      1980

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 2 года назад +2

      I remember seeing clips of this on PBS channels (13, 21 and 25) as a child in the mid 1980s NYC. I remember being both fascinated and bored at the same time, cuz most of what they were saying went over my head. LOL. I can obviously appreciate it better now.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 Год назад

      @@michellereichardt3323 It was 1979 and 1980, not 1980 exclusively. The Los Angeles television station KHJ-TV(now KCAL) Ch. 9 first aired this Thames Television(🇬🇧) documentary in the fall of 1979 and early in the late winter/early spring of 1980 when I was in 5th grade at the time.

    • @marine4lyfe85
      @marine4lyfe85 11 месяцев назад +1

      Some of the interviews were pre-79. Mountbatten was assassinated in 79.

  • @hadassah179
    @hadassah179 2 месяца назад

    what was the difference between MGM and Paramount?

  • @classiclife7204
    @classiclife7204 8 месяцев назад +1

    The music is wayyyyyy too high in the mix. It nearly drowns out Agnes DeMille's beautiful description of the natural Hollywood that she knew. And there shouldn't have been any music competing with Allan Dwan, who was in his 90s when they interviewed him, dying about a year after this series' release. Sometimes the music is louder than Mason's narration. I've talked about this series at length on an older upload on RUclips, so now I guess I'm picking nits. But seriously, turn it down! - these folks were old as hell and most of them weren't nearly as vigorous as DeMille. Let them be heard clearly!

  • @thebundleart
    @thebundleart Год назад +1

    Excellent work! I really learned several stuff I didn't know. I am having a video channel about the History of Cinema, where I focus more on movies from different periods and movements and I speak also about the birth of Hollywood. I would be really interested to read your opinion about my work!

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 2 года назад +4

    Holly weird

  • @marcdelente2456
    @marcdelente2456 2 года назад +2

    Hollywood non ce n était pas ce que l'ont croi derrière les strass et les bijoux les dandys ça sentait pas bon et sinon ont rajoutait un peu plus de parfums .
    Comme aujourd hui les peoples viene montré leurs jeunesses éternels avec le botox et leurs gros lolos et leurs grosses fesses vraiment dégueulace .

    • @Coolarrowify
      @Coolarrowify Год назад +2

      How do you know that your comments are true? Have you been to LA? Are you an expert regarding film history? Your comments reflect your lack of knowledge about LA or the early film business. You may realize that Botox and large derrières were not possible in the early years of film history, so don’t confuse now and then. Don’t confuse posers versus true artists. Hollywood created the magic that is Garbo, Lubitsch, Cukor, Marilyn, Clara Bow, Adrian, Edith Head, Hitchcock, Judy Garland, Busby Berkeley, Mary Pickford, Valentino, Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, Cedric Gibbons, etc. You understand what I mean. You should try to separate the fiction and the hype from the artistry that arose from the early film pioneers. I am perplexed by your simplistic thinking and crass comments. C’est dommage, mon enfant.

    • @walterlahaye2128
      @walterlahaye2128 Год назад +1

      The motion picture industry is the devil’s family altar, through the Hollywood looking glass

  • @edwardlee654
    @edwardlee654 2 года назад +3

    The content is here. The behavior is a shared admission. Some of the info. is presumed to analogize the presenter as legible, some so be it. Follow along is contributive to appreciation. Hollywood, technical merit to communications by generational. United States, United nations. Accredited by templating the movements, including personal and incorporated to/of the industry. Tasteful report, yes. Edward 7034 21293-20- Apr- 2022.

    • @LathropLdST
      @LathropLdST Год назад +2

      What are you prattling on about?