
Rex Ingram
Visionary Director of the Silent Screen
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

November 15, 2014
Irish-born film director Rex Ingram dazzled audiences in the silent film era with stylized, visually opulent epics such as The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse (starring Rudolph Valentino), The Garden of Allah, Scaramouche, and The Prisoner of Zenda. However, though Ingram lived until 1950, he only made one sound film. This is an appreciation of this complex, contradictory, creative, almost forgotten figure. Many of the director's visual elements are sadly degraded, only represented by second- or third-generation prints, and some of his films survive only as fragments, or are lost altogether. The book covers Ingram's journey to America and his striking good looks, which perhaps eased his entry into directing. He was not only a filmmaker but a writer and sculptor, which may explain his early exit from movies. Also covered here is his long marriage to his leading lady Alice Terry, his controlling, singleminded behavior on and off the set, his anti-Semitism, a rupture with Hollywood, a later conversion to Islam, and his long self-imposed exile in North Africa. VERDICT Irish film scholar Barton (Trinity Coll., Dublin) calls her subject a "ghostly presence," and much of this material is based on Ingram's unpublished memoir or recollections from long-gone friends and coworkers, giving the book a slightly impersonal tone. On balance, this is a welcome addition on an unjustly neglected film pioneer.--Stephen Rees, formerly with Levittown Lib., PA
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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