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John V.A. Weaver

Toronto Silent Film Festival 2013: King Vidor’s The Crowd is throng medicine
The Crowd

Directed by King Vidor

Written by King Vidor and John V.A. Weaver

USA, 1928

The Crowd is that rarest of all Hollywood productions – a studio-made film that was never intended to make money. Released by industry leader MGM in March 1928, this magnificent cinematic treatise on the pitfalls of American Dreaming was greenlit by F. Scott Fitzgerad’s “Last Tycoon” himself, wunderkind Irving Thalberg, who believed that true success in the entertainment industry entailed tossing the occasional “pure prestige” production at the public, whether they wanted it or not. Made at the height of America’s dizzying 1920s business boom, The Crowd is perhaps even more timely today than it was 85 years ago, and Saturday’s Tsff screening (endlessly enhanced by the improvisational piano work of accompanist Laura Silberberg) proved that it has lost none of its capacity to dazzle and unsettle contemporary viewers, in equal measure.

King Vidor’s...
See full article at SoundOnSight
  • 4/7/2013
  • by David Fiore
  • SoundOnSight
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