Lilac Time (1928 film)
Lilac Time | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by |
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Produced by | John McCormick |
Written by |
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Based on |
Lilac Time (novel) by Guy Fowler |
Starring | |
Music by | |
Cinematography | Sidney Hickox |
Edited by | Alexander Hall |
Production company |
First National Pictures |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 100 minutes (11 reels) |
Country | United States |
Language |
English intertitles Vitaphone (with music score and sound effects) |
Lilac Time is a 1928 American silent romantic war film directed by George Fitzmaurice and starring Colleen Moore and Gary Cooper. Based on a novel by Guy Fowler, the film is about young American aviators fighting for Britain during World War I who are billeted in a field next to a farmhouse in France. The daughter who lives on the farm meets one of the new aviators who is attracted to her. As the flyers head off on a mission, the young aviator promises to return to her.
Lilac Time was produced by John McCormick (Moore's husband), and distributed by First National Pictures. The film is based on a 1917 Broadway play written by Jane Murfin and actress Jane Cowl, who adapted the story from a book by Guy Fowler.[1] This film was released with a Vitaphone score and music effects, featuring the song "Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time," but there was no spoken dialogue. The film premiered in New York City on August 3, 1928, and was release in the United States on October 18, 1928.
Production background
The film was shot on sets at First National's Burbank studio and on location in El Torro, California, where a working airstrip, full-sized French Village and farm were built. In addition a portable machine shop serviced the eight aircraft used in the production. Looking for realism, many extras cast as soldiers in the film had been actual World War I soldiers, in the ranks they portrayed. The chief stunt pilot, Dick Grace, had only finished doing stunt work on the Paramount film Wings almost two months earlier. Grace sustained a severe neck injury in a stunt crash while making Wings but recovered in time for Lilac Time.
The film offers several phases, beginning with slapstick comedy elements, becoming an intense romantic film, then segueing into a spectacular aerial showdown followed by a duel in the sky between Cooper's character and the Red Baron before returning to romantic complications.
Lilac Time had its opening in Los Angeles at the Carthay Circle Theatre where, in the lobby, among other promotional materials on display, was the wrecked fuselage of one of the aircraft that had been destroyed during the filming. The film cost one million dollars to produce, an amount equal to Moore's previous two films. The studio recouped the cost of the film within months. By the end of 1928, the film had out-performed Moore's earlier star vehicle Flaming Youth (1923).
Among those in the cast were Colleen Moore's brother Cleve (under the name Cleve Moore) and Jack Stone, her cousin. Eugenie Besserer had played "Mrs. Goode," a mother figure in Colleen's earlier film Little Orphan Annie, the first film to bring Colleen a measure of fame.[2]
A restored 35mm print of the film was screened at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in September 2014.
Cast
- Colleen Moore as Jeannine Berthelot
- Gary Cooper as Captain Philip Blythe
- Burr McIntosh as General Blyth
- George Cooper as Mechanic's helper
- Cleve Moore as Captain Russell
- Kathryn McGuire as Lady Iris Rankin
- Eugenie Besserer as Madame Berthelot
- Emile Chautard as The Mayor
- Jack Stone as The Kid
- Edward Dillon as Mike the Mechanic
- Dick Grace as Aviator
- Stuart Knox as Aviator
- Harlan Hilton as Aviator
- Richard Jarvis as Aviator
- Jack Ponder as Aviator
- Dan Dowling as Aviator
- Eddie Clayton as The Enemy Ace
- Arthur Lake as The Unlucky One
- Philo McCullough as German Officer
- Nelson McDowell as French Drummer
- J. Gunnis Davis
- Paul Hurst
- Harold Lockwood - (Harold Lockwood Jr.; son of the late silent movie star)
References
Footnotes
- Jeff Codori (2012), Colleen Moore; A Biography of the Silent Film Star, McFarland Publishing Print ISBN 978-0-7864-4969-9 / EBook ISBN 978-0-7864-8899-5
External links
- Lilac Time at IMDB
- Lilac Time at SilentEra
- Lilac Time at Allmovie.com
- Lilac Time at Virtual History
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