Tag Archives: Cecil B. Demille

Fashion In Film Festival This weekend

Secrets Of The East at the Museum of the Moving Image

Secrets of The Orient at the Museum of The moving Image playing this Saturday, April 16th. With Live music by Stephen Horne
Imported 35mm print from the National Film Center, Tokyo
Below information provided by the Museum of The Moving Image.
Dir. Alexandre Volkoff. 1928, 126 mins. With Marcella Albani, D. Dmitriev, Brigitte Helm. Germany/France. This exquisite fantasy of an escape into the “Orient” features over-the-top ornamental sets by Ivan Lochakoff and sensuous costumes by Boris Bilinsky, a magnificent blend of Eastern and Western motifs. With its paradisical atmosphere and a sumptuously stencil-colored sequence, the film is a fairy-tale world of fancy filled with adventure, magic, mystery, and harem dancers.
Male and Female

Male and Female Saturday, April 16, 5:00 p.m.
Introduced by Inga Fraser and Live music by Stephen Horne
35mm print from George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film

Below information provided by the Museum of The Moving Image.
Dir. Cecil B. DeMille. 1919, 97 mins. With Gloria Swanson, Thomas Meighan. In this film’s notorious dream sequence, Gloria Swanson dramatically enters a lions’ den decked out in a lavish all-white robe and a headdress made of pearls, beads, and peacock feathers. The showstopping outfit, designed by Mitchell Leisen, was so heavy that Swanson required two crew members to help her move. Inga Fraser is associate curator of Fashion in Film at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, University of the Arts London.
Free with Museum admission.
For more information on the Fashion In Film Festival running through April 24th, please visit the Mueum of the Moving Image’s website here.
For more information on Fashion in Film, please visit their website here.

Salomé at the Fashion in Film Festival

Salomé at the Museum of The Moving Image

“The Mystery of Love is greater than the Mystery of Death.” Declares Salomé, the troubled daughter of a king. This film is elaborately costumed in Natacha Rambova’s design, and features illustrations by the legendary Aubrey Beardsley. In one moment, as Salomé imagines herself with the king’s white peacocks we see this vision complete and manifest, and the result is nothing short of beautiful. This is again epitomized in moments of her dancing beneath a veil, in a gorgeous motion. Rambova used material only from Maison Lewis of Paris, using genuine silver lamé on loincloths worn by the guards. The King’s retinue who are swathed in theatrically ostentatious apparel are nearly a caricature of themselves. His soothsayers wear enormous, surrealistic turbans, others with braided coils of hair pointing upwards, at the divinity that seems to have escaped this unfortunate Royal Family, and ultimately Salomé herself.
The 1923 film which echoes the biblical story of King Herod and the killing of John the Baptist was directed by Charles Bryant and written by Oscar Wilde, and poetic dialogue abounds. This film features a luxurious splendor of visual decoration, set design, and opulent costume. Salomé is showing at in the Museum of the Moving Image with Live music by Donald Sosin, and introduced by Pat Kirham.
The Fashion in Film Festival runs April 15-24th, and features a wide range of underground and decadently beautiful films from the 1890’s to the present century. The program was curated by Marketa Uhlirova, with Eugenia Paulicelli, Ronald Gregg, Stuart Comer, and Inga Fraser.
— Stevyn Llewellyn
Salomé
Part of Fashion in Film Festival: Birds of Paradise
Sunday, April 24, 4:30 p.m. at the Museum of The Moving Image.
More information on the Birds of Paradise: Fashion in Film Festival can be seen on their website here.

Fashion in Film Festival Coming to New York


The Museum of the Moving Image presents Birds of Paradise, which is considered an intoxicating exploration of costume as a form of cinematic spectacle throughout the history of American and European cinema. Lectures, seminars, and special Q&A’s will take place during the festival.
Highlights will include Nino Oxila’s Rapsodia Satanica, (1915-1917), The Golden Butterfly ( 1926 ) by Michael Curtiz, Lupe (1966), by Jose Rodriguez-Soltero, as well as archival, rare shorts from Georges Melies, and Segundo de Chomon. Classic films such as Male and Female (1919) by Cecil B. DeMille, as well as Charles Bryant’s Salome (1923) will also be screened. The silent films will feature musical accompaniment by Donal Sossin and Stephen Horne.
The Fashion in Film Festival, Birds of Paradise, continues to make a significant contribution to out understanding of both fashion and film. The amazing imagery captured here on film will amaze and delight you
—Jane Rapley, Head of Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design

The Fashion in Film Festival has established itself as a lively and wonderfully programmed cinema event that spans a wide range of genres and periods, finding a common link in the medium’s emphasis on visual spectacle, dazzling excess, and general enchantment.Museum of the Moving Image is thrilled to be the New York venue for this original and essential film festival”
—David Schwartz, Chief Curator, MoMI

A full schedule of screenings and events will be announced soon and will be available on the Museum’s website at http://movingimage.us.