Movies With Michael
Celebrating Film: Past and Present
Thursday, April 9, 2026
Movie Review: Beast
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Movie Review: The Yeti
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Monday, April 6, 2026
Jobyna Ralston From the Tennessee Hills
Jobyna Ralston is a name that should be familiar to many fans of silent comedy. She was the leading lady in seven of Harold Lloyd's classic feature length movies (including The Freshman (1925), Why Worry (1923) and The Kid Brother (1927)). While her work with Harold is her greatest claim to fame, she had a much more varied career than this. She even had a decent role in the first movie to win Best Picture, Wings (1927). She worked with another legendary screen comedian with Max Linder in The Three Must-Get-Theres (1922). Jobyna was directed by Frank Capra in The Power of the Press (1928). She even worked in early talkies with such films as The College Coquette (1929) and Sheer Luck (1931).
Like many silent film stars she had a career on stage before acting in movies. At the age of 21 she made her Broadway debut with Two Little Girls in Blue (May 03, 1921 - Aug 27, 1921). (Source for dates: https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-cast-staff/jobyna-ralston-424259).
Here is an article about Jobyna Ralston from an issue of Motion Picture Classic (dated May 1926). If you have trouble reading the following pages, click on them and use your touch screen to zoom in. If you don't have a touch screen, click here.
Sunday, April 5, 2026
Movie Review: A Great Awakening
Filming Beau Geste
After a recent restoration, screenings at the TCM and Cinecon Classic Film Festivals and a Blu-ray release, the silent version of Beau Geste (1926) has been receiving much attention lately. Because of this many are discovering what a good movie it is. That makes it the perfect time to share this vintage article with you.
This article is from a June 1926 issue of Motion Picture Classic. If you have any trouble reading the following pages, click on them and use your touch screen to zoom in. If you don't have a touch screen, click here.
How the Keystone Kops Happened
Have you ever wondered just "How the Keystone Kops Happened?" Well, you might want to keep wondering as there is probably not a whole lot of truth to the following article. If you have read the book, CHASE! A Tribute to the Keystone Cops (which is an essential read for any silent comedy fan), you know that the exact origin of the Kops is not very easy to pinpoint and is definitely more complex than is presented here. That the author of this article was in charge of publicity for the Keystone Studio casts an even greater sense of doubt over this article as this is obviously the story that Mack Sennett (the head of the Keystone Studio) wanted you to read. Still this is a very entertaining and fun read that should delight fans of silent comedy.
This following article is from an issue of Motion Picture Classic dated June 1926. If you have any trouble reading, click on the pages below and use your touch screen to zoom in. If you don't have a touch screen, click here.









