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Word: screen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Denial. Claire Windsor is the latest to succumb to the current screen fashion of portraying, in one film, a young girl in her teens, and a woman of 45, thus putting screen art above mere good looks. In her latter manifestation, she dreams herself back to her girlhood stifled by her mother-living again the romance of the Spanish-American War, learning not to cramp her own daughter's style of loving. Lewis Beach's stage play, The Square Peg, here transferred to the screen, has had some of the acrid tang carefully sponged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Mar. 16, 1925 | 3/16/1925 | See Source »

...Goose Hangs High. Another transcription of a Lewis Beach play, this picture is primarily notable for the appearance over the Hollywood horizon of Constance Bennett, daughter of Richard Bennett. She shows much promise, fertile grace and panomimic adaptability. The burden of the story is well sustained on the screen, to wit, that if you but scratch the brass of the heedless young brood of today, you'll find true gold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Mar. 16, 1925 | 3/16/1925 | See Source »

...pantomime that has ever enriched the cinema. He starts down to breakfast, falls in love with a charming proletarian whom he meets in the hall, lets the Princess to whom he is engaged marry her brother's tutor. To Franz Molnar, author, $50,000 was paid for screen rights - a graceful benevolence, since Molnar could not by any chance detect in the cinema so much as a plagiarism of his play (The Swan, reviewed in TIME, Nov. 5, 1923). For in the play there was no fly, no impolite story, no charming proletarian, and in the end requirements...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Mar. 9, 1925 | 3/9/1925 | See Source »

...film," he said, "which was one starring the diver, Annette Kellerman. The beauty and grace of her performance could not be equalled outside of the sculpture of classic Greece and yet even this was marred by the taint of realism. Whenever she would strike the water someone behind the screen struck a cymbal to represent the splash...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ETHICAL CLUB CONDEMNS MOVIES, JAZZ, AND RADIO | 3/2/1925 | See Source »

...Coolidge's partisans set up one screen on which they paint his portrait in heroic lines, bold, strong, silent. His antagonists set up another screen on which they limn him as futile, vacillating, insignificant. What of the truth is not hidden by one screen is completely masked by the other...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Man and the Mask | 2/23/1925 | See Source »

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