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Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse

 
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steven.sawyer

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Since: Dec 30, 2005
Posts: 20



(Msg. 1) Posted: Sat Jul 07, 2007 9:24 pm
Post subject: Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse
Archived from groups: alt>movies>silent (more info?)

Like the "Mabuse" series, were there any other sound sequels to silent
pictures?
Thanks,
Steve

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mikegebert

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Since: Jun 12, 2007
Posts: 64



(Msg. 2) Posted: Sat Jul 07, 2007 9:24 pm
Post subject: Re: Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse [Login to view extended thread Info.]
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On Jul 7, 4:24 pm, <steven.saw... RemoveThis @banet.net> wrote:
> Like the "Mabuse" series, were there any other sound sequels to silent
> pictures?
> Thanks,
> Steve

What Price Glory had several talkie sequels-- The Cock-eyed World, The
Slippery Pearls and Women of All Nations.

Our Daily Bread (1934) is officially a sequel to The Crowd, though it
has little in common other than character names.

Of course there are any number of series which continued straight from
silence into sound-- there are silent Charlie Chans, the first Philo
Vance was shot silent and post-dubbed, and lots of western stars who
played "themselves" over and over made both talkies and sound films
(Hoot Gibson, Buck Jones, and so on). So did Rin Tin Tin.

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R H Draney

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Since: Feb 25, 2007
Posts: 476



(Msg. 3) Posted: Sat Jul 07, 2007 11:01 pm
Post subject: Re: Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse [Login to view extended thread Info.]
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<steven.sawyer DeleteThis @banet.net> filted:
>
>Like the "Mabuse" series, were there any other sound sequels to silent
>pictures?

MAD WEDNESDAY, aka THE SIN OF HAROLD DIDDLEBOCK....r


--
"You got Schadenfreude on my Weltanschauung!"
"You got Weltanschauung in my Schadenfreude!"
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Eric Grayson

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Since: Nov 05, 2005
Posts: 534



(Msg. 4) Posted: Sat Jul 07, 2007 11:37 pm
Post subject: Re: Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse [Login to view extended thread Info.]
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Don't forget the Cohens and Kelleys.


In article <1183844293.682649.208470 RemoveThis @n60g2000hse.googlegroups.com>,
<"mikegebert@gmail.com"> wrote:

> On Jul 7, 4:24 pm, <steven.saw... RemoveThis @banet.net> wrote:
> > Like the "Mabuse" series, were there any other sound sequels to silent
> > pictures?
> > Thanks,
> > Steve
>
> What Price Glory had several talkie sequels-- The Cock-eyed World, The
> Slippery Pearls and Women of All Nations.
>
> Our Daily Bread (1934) is officially a sequel to The Crowd, though it
> has little in common other than character names.
>
> Of course there are any number of series which continued straight from
> silence into sound-- there are silent Charlie Chans, the first Philo
> Vance was shot silent and post-dubbed, and lots of western stars who
> played "themselves" over and over made both talkies and sound films
> (Hoot Gibson, Buck Jones, and so on). So did Rin Tin Tin.
>
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Neil Midkiff

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Since: Nov 07, 2005
Posts: 205



(Msg. 5) Posted: Sun Jul 08, 2007 7:02 am
Post subject: Re: Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

mikegebert DeleteThis @gmail.com wrote:
> On Jul 7, 4:24 pm, <steven.saw... DeleteThis @banet.net> wrote:
>> Like the "Mabuse" series, were there any other sound sequels to silent
>> pictures?
>> Thanks,
>> Steve

> Of course there are any number of series which continued straight from
> silence into sound-- there are silent Charlie Chans, the first Philo
> Vance was shot silent and post-dubbed, and lots of western stars who
> played "themselves" over and over made both talkies and sound films
> (Hoot Gibson, Buck Jones, and so on). So did Rin Tin Tin.

Laurel and Hardy's series of silent comedy shorts adapted to sound
without a noticeable break.

The silent "Our Dancing Daughters" (1928) had a silent followup, "Our
Modern Maidens" (1929), and continued into talkies with "Our Blushing
Brides" (1930).

-Neil Midkiff
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Harold Aherne

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Since: Jun 21, 2007
Posts: 32



(Msg. 6) Posted: Sun Jul 08, 2007 11:31 am
Post subject: Re: Sound Sequels to Silent Pictures e.g. Mabuse [Login to view extended thread Info.]
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And there's also Show Girl (1928) which was followed by Showgirl in
Hollywood (1930), though it's possible that the former picture had
talking sequences. Both feature Alice White as the title character,
named Dixie Dugan.

-Harold
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