Welcome to BlogHub: the Best in Veteran and Emerging Classic Movie Blogs
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You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.

Midnight on TCM: A Woman of Paris
Smitten Kitten Vintage Posted by Rhonda0731 on Jun 29, 2014
Originally posted on Travalanche: Tonight at midnight on TCM, Charlie Chaplin’s 1923 melodrama masterpiece A Woman of Paris. (He wanted us to call him “Charles” at this stage. You’ll never find a greater Chaplin apologist than this author, but calling him “Charles” is simply a Bridge Too read more

Surrender (1927) A Silent Film Review
Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Jun 29, 2014
By Fritzi Kramer on June 29, 2014 in Blog, Feature, Silent Movie Review, Silents vs Talkies He’s a Cossack prince. She’s the rabbi’s daughter. Can they find love? Also, the hero is a tad bit genocidal. Yes, that is the plot. The unusual duo of Mary Philbin and Ivan Mosjoukine (in his only Hollywood read more

A double dose of Lombard laughs in Seattle this summer
Carole & Co. Posted by vp19 on Jun 29, 2014
Two Carole Lombard comedy favorites, both teaming her with Fred MacMurray, are among a six-pack of fun films to be shown this summer at the Seattle Art Museum under the title "For Laughing Out Loud.""Hands Across The Table" will be shown July 10, with "True Confession" set for July 24. Other films i read more

The Fire Detective, 1929, a Serial Gone Missing!
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 28, 2014
The Fire Detective, was a Pathé Exchange Chapter-play (10 two-reelers in length), directed by Spencer Gordon Bennet and Thomas Storey, from a story by Frank Leon Smith, adapted by George Arthur Gray; starring Gladys McConnell, Hugh Allan and Leo D. Maloney. According to the Exhibitors read more

The Fire Detective, 1929, a Serial Gone Missing!
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 28, 2014
The Fire Detective, was a Pathé Exchange Chapter-play (10 two-reelers in length), directed by Spencer Gordon Bennet and Thomas Storey, from a story by Frank Leon Smith, adapted by George Arthur Gray; starring Gladys McConnell, Hugh Allan and Leo D. Maloney. According to the Exhibitors read more

The Fire Detective, 1929, a Serial Gone Missing!
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 28, 2014
The Fire Detective, was a Pathé Exchange Chapter-play (10 two-reelers in length), directed by Spencer Gordon Bennet and Thomas Storey, from a story by Frank Leon Smith, adapted by George Arthur Gray; starring Gladys McConnell, Hugh Allan and Leo D. Maloney. According to the Exhibitors read more

Spencer Gordon Bennet, A Lot of Movies Unaccounted For! A Brief Biography
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 27, 2014
Spencer Gordon Bennet Spencer Gordon Bennet, (sometimes spelled: Bennett) anyone familiar with serials (silent or talkies) knows the work of Mr. Bennet, he has for a long while be considered the king of the chapter-play, and he may have more serial titles to his name than we thought! In Septe read more

Spencer Gordon Bennet, A Lot of Movies Unaccounted For! A Brief Biography
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 27, 2014
Spencer Gordon Bennet Spencer Gordon Bennet, (sometimes spelled: Bennett) anyone familiar with serials (silent or talkies) knows the work of Mr. Bennet, he has for a long while be considered the king of the chapter-play, and he may have more serial titles to his name than we thought! In Septe read more

Spencer Gordon Bennet, A Lot of Movies Unaccounted For! A Brief Biography
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 27, 2014
Spencer Gordon Bennet Spencer Gordon Bennet, (sometimes spelled: Bennett) anyone familiar with serials (silent or talkies) knows the work of Mr. Bennet, he has for a long while be considered the king of the chapter-play, and he may have more serial titles to his name than we thought! In Septe read more

Zander the Great (1925) A Silent Film Review
Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Jun 27, 2014
By Fritzi Kramer on June 27, 2014 in Blog, Feature, Silent Movie Review A sort of orphanage-western-drama-comedy, Zander the Great was one of Marion Davies’ big hits and her first film for the newly-merged MGM. She is an orphan who takes in a small boy and then sets out in search of his fathe read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world".
Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more

Silent Movie Time Capsule: Take a tour of Hollywood with this 1926 studio map!
Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Jun 26, 2014
Here is a very charming curio from 1926. As noted in the caption, the map of Hollywood is consciously old fashioned and it is quite cute too, I might add. It is quite interesting to see who made the cut and got mentioned on the map by name. I live in California and I have never seen a leaping tuna. read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world".
Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world".
Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more

Hypochondria Took a Lot More Effort Before WebMD
Mildred's Fatburgers Posted by Beth Daniels on Jun 26, 2014
I wanna see this movie in French Sort of a Levittown of the Hereafter Send Me No Flowers (1964) One forgets that there were only three Doris Day/Rock Hudson/Tony Randall films, so good was their chemistry. Send Me No Flowers is the last of them, and unlike th read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios
Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014
"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world".
Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more
