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Raoul Walsh Was a Movie Maker With an Eye Patch and Attitude

Joe Riley

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An Eclectic Journal of Opinion, History, Poetry and General Bloviating

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"Raoul Walsh, the director in an eye patch long before John Ford or Nicholas Ray, had a long career in films spanning the pioneering years of D. W. Griffith in the silents to wide screen Technicolor epics of the mid-‘60s. He specialized in action pictures—gritty crime dramas, westerns, war movies. Meaty parts for women—with a few notable exceptions—were rare and his friend Jack Pickford (elder brother of Mary) told him that “Your idea of light comedy is to burn down a whorehouse.” In the process he made some of the most memorable films in Hollywood history never to win Oscars." READ MORE
 

Raoul Walsh raconte The Big Trail​


WFAA Story on USA Film Festival 1973​

 
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The Big Trail Year : 1930 USA Director : Raoul Walsh John Wayne, Marguerite Churchill​

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"The Birth of a Nation (originally called The Clansman) is a 1915 American silent epic drama film directed and co-produced by D. W. Griffith and starring Lillian Gish. The screenplay is adapted from the novel and play The Clansman, both by Thomas Dixon, Jr. Griffith co-wrote the screenplay (with Frank E. Woods), and co-produced the film (with Harry Aitken). It was released on February 8, 1915."

The Birth of a Nation 1915 720p Full Movie​

 

Raoul Walsh: Adventures in Filmaking

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Raoul Walsh · 149m · DCP​

"Few films retain the power to conjure a genuine sense of awe and a feeling of pleasurable excitement like this monumental, Orientalist silent fantasia — a Douglas Fairbanks vehicle which became Walsh’s first big-budget A-picture. Fairbanks’s impressive athleticism proves a great match for the robust physicality of Walsh’s directorial style, and the results of their collaboration still look stunning 100 years on."

READ MORE
 
Just when I thought we had exhausted all possible pictures Raoul Walsh related, I ran across him in bluejeans. Look at those cuffs. :cool:

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The True Adventures of Raoul Walsh

Introduction: A Wild Ride

It’s a rank understatement to say that Walsh’s personality
has never been properly identified.
—Manny Farber


"When Raoul Walsh was fifteen years old he awoke one night from a dream that left him shaking. He trembled as much from dread as from a half-formed sense of excitement. In a sleep that seemed as much nightmare as fantasy, he saw that his beloved mother, Elizabeth, had suddenly died. He could make no sense of it and could no longer reach out to touch her. An overwhelming sadness took over. But at the same time he had a sense of something startling: he now stood on the brink of a fabulous journey, a great adventure that offered escape from the hole he felt had just been shot through the middle of his heart."

"The dread that touched young Walsh that night was no fiction. Just two days earlier, his beautiful and much beloved mother, Elizabeth Walsh, died of cancer at the age of forty-two, leaving behind a devoted husband, three children and a household she had filled with endless storytelling and fanciful flights of imagination. For Raoul Walsh the grief was almost unbearable. As he wrote in his autobiography over seventy years later, “I was quite unprepared for the sudden blow that left me motherless at fifteen…Mother passed away in the big master bedroom into which I used to steal and beg for one of her stories about an earlier America…Where before I had loved it, the place became unbearable… The terrible thing was that she was gone and I was only half a person…”

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"As he grew older the press saw Walsh not so much as a wild spirit but as a humorous man who life spilled out onto the public through endless anecdotes; he told crazy stories about his antics with Errol Flynn, Jimmy Cagney and Humphrey Bogart. He quipped endlessly about prostitutes he had known, cowboys and bandits he ran with; about getting drunk with the legends who visited his set, with the crew he adored more than any other bunch."

"But these were stories, part of the adventure, part of the fiction he learned to wrap around himself so that he would not really be seen. “Let’s get the hell out of here!,” he often yelled out on the set when a scene wrapped. Part humorous, part serious, the quip is the essential Walsh—the man half in but at the same time half way out the door, perpetually ready to bolt, to leap and walk quickly away and to disappear into the dark corners of a soundstage where no one could find him but always knew he was there just the same."

From Marilyn Ann Moss’ biography of Raoul Walsh, The True Adventures of Raoul Walsh, by Marilyn Ann Moss, published by The University Press of Kentucky.
 
The Little Country Mouse (1914)
Directed by Donald Crisp!

Raoul Walsh plays Capt. Stiles. Shows up at the card game (@3:20 )


11 mins
 
The Little Country Mouse (1914)
Directed by Donald Crisp!

Raoul Walsh plays Capt. Stiles. Shows up at the card game (@3:20 )


11 mins
The girl owed $250.00 in a card game in which she didn't know they were playing for money? That seemed like a large sum for the time.
It seems weird that they could be called actors, with no lines to be memorized. Maybe they were "directed" by the Director during filming, like an air traffic controller?

10 of The Longest Silent Movie Masterpieces Ever

 
The girl owed $250.00 in a card game in which she didn't know they were playing for money? That seemed like a large sum for the time.
It seems weird that they could be called actors, with no lines to be memorized. Maybe they were "directed" by the Director during filming, like an air traffic controller?

10 of The Longest Silent Movie Masterpieces Ever

You are right. The inflation calculator says $250 has the buying power of $8057 today! (I always check for inflation. ;) )
When you read a book, you have to imagine pictures, unless it's a comic book. When you watch silents you are supposed to use your imagination on dialogue?
 
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