The fifth annual
Toronto Silent Film Festival begins today! Our good friend Shirley Hughes has always put on a wonderful program every year of classics from the silent era, nicely mixing some familiar titles with some rarities, but this year she may have outdone herself.
The 2014 lineup features silent film stars Charlie Chaplin, Lillian Gish, and Emil Jannings, directed by such masters as Josef von Sternberg, F.W. Murnau and Victor Sjostrom. Refreshingly, the selected films are not the obvious choices to represent these talents. Therefore, the thrill of discovery is on high: to most, there will surely be something they haven't seen.
Another unique aspect of the TSFF is that it doesn't confine itself to one venue for its six-day run. Movies are shown downtown, at the Beaches, and at the west end, thus encouraging neighbouring residents to check something out whenever something plays in their area during the festival.
As always, the movies are presented with musical accompaniment, guest speakers and film notes.
Here is this year's schedule:
Tonight: Lillian Gish in Victor Sjostrom's masterpiece, The Wind (1928).
Friday Apr. 4: F.W. Murnau's City Girl (1930), whose plot is a reverse spin to his classic, Sunrise.
Sat. Apr. 5: 2014 marks the centenary of The Little Tramp's debut. Charlie Chaplin's iconic character is however being represented with
The Circus (1928; pictured above), a feature every bit as good as his acknowledged silent classics,
The Gold Rush or
City Lights, equally adept at hilarity and pathos.
Sun. Apr. 6: 1000 Laffs: It Started With Charlie. The 1000 Laffs series is always certified fun. This collection of shorts features silent comedians Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, Arbuckle, Keaton, Langdon and Chase...
Mon. Apr. 7: A major influence on Chaplin, Keaton and all the rest was the French comedian Max Linder. His tour de force
Seven Years Bad Luck (1921) is being featured at Casa Loma, accompanied by the house Wurlitzer organ.. .sure to be a show stopper!
Tues. Apr. 8: Emil Jannings is a general during the Russian Revolution in Sternberg's
The Last Command (1928; pictured below), who becomes cast as an extra in a Hollywood movie on that very subject.
For information on show start times, locations and more,
visit their website today!