Author Archive: Retro

Author Archives for Retro

A man falsely imprisoned through the testimony of the real criminal, and must be exhonerated by “the power of the press”, a reporter who learns of his innocence.

A young woman at a crossroads is shown what her future would be like for each choice.

Reformed husband-and-wife criminal team are now respected and affluent members of the community, until a former associate threatens to expose them unless they help him pull one more heist. COLOR TINTED.

Richard of Gloucester uses manipulation and murder to gain the English throne.

Vampish Glaum is a spy whose assignment is to prevent a British agent’s African desert safari from reaching its destination. Produced and Supervised by J. Parker Read.

Beautiful German spy Florence Vidor, caught between clueless Jack Holt and wily Sessue Hayakawa. The men are trying to protect information about a convoy in the Pacific where a new German force is rampaging — remember, this is World War One, and the Japanese were on our side — and Vidor is trying to find out about it, while fighting her feelings as Jack Holt keeps proposing to her. Well composed shots and skilled actors keep this one moving along. Charles Ogle is a bit over the top of Vidor’s ruthless doctor/spymaster, but in a movie like this, some one has to be.

A federal agent is sent to a small town to bust up a counterfeiting ring, which is apparently headquartered in the local railway station. The counterfeiters have framed the station’s manager for the crime, and she must work with the agent to clear her name and get the goods on the real counterfeiters.

John Trimble has embezzled and obtains another identity by having a mutilated body buried in his place. He is later arrested for murdering himself. During the trial his mother, before dying from shock, asks him to keep his identity secret since his wife is now married to the Governor and expecting a child.

A look at the 1912 clash between striking factory workers & Czarist troops. Directed by Sergei Eisenstein, his debut. English titles. Dir. William Nigh.

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