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Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Posted By: Someonelse
Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Souls for Sale (1923)
DVD5 | ISO+MDS | NTSC 4:3 | 01:30:01 | 3,39 Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: None
Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance, Classics

Director: Rupert Hughes
Stars: Eleanor Boardman, Frank Mayo, Richard Dix

The souls in question are silver-screen hopefuls in this witty, insightful glimpse at the early movie business. Feared lost for decades, it includes unique working cameos of director Erich von Stroheim and a non-Tramp Charlie Chaplin, and features starlet Eleanor Boardman, the "Cinderella of Hollywood" whose rags-to-riches story echoed her character's. Escaping from a train journey with her sinister new husband, Mem Steddon (Boardman) crawls across the California desert and spies her salvation: an Arab sheik riding a camel! The location movie crew brings Mem to Tinseltown, where bit parts and acting lessons lead her to starring roles - and a fiery finale with her murderous spouse Lew Cody. If you like classic Hollywood, you'll love this picture, full of carefully observed detail, warmth and plenty of soul.


Souls for Sale relies upon its share of newly-minted Hollywood cliches, but it is a celebration of the myths and legends of Hollywood, not a realistic expose of the scandals and workings of the studio system. In fact it takes great care to avoid even the aroma of scandal. One intertitle offers a bit of Arbuckle-era moralizing, "When an actor gets into trouble, they blame the screen. A scandal is fatal to any one in the moving pictures." A scene depicting "one of the famous Thursday night hops at the Hollywood Hotel" seems to promise a bit of Prohibition-era decadence, but the title card dispels such expectations, "Many of the famous movie stars dance there until the heathenish hour of eleven thirty, unless they are too tired to keep awake so long."

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Behind-the-scenes glimpses into the workings of the Hollywood studio system have always provided filmgoers with an added level of viewing pleasure. Like reading a fan magazine while sitting in the theatre, it allows them to enjoy the fictional pleasures of Hollywood make-believe, and at the same time experience insights into the normal lives of Tinseltown's elite.

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

But the reality offered by fan magazines in the 1920s was hardly the truth, and in the same way, behind-the-scenes dramas are little better than a different kind of make believe, in which big-screen stars merely pretend to be themselves – a magic mirror revealing how Hollywood would like to see itself. And the viewer must constantly distinguish between the familiar Hollywood stars playing themselves, and those who are performing as fictional characters.

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Such films are perhaps more valuable as documents of the science of silent filmmaking, for they reveal the usually invisible hardware of slates, cameras, lighting equipment, studio screening rooms and offices. One scene depicts a strange bit of cinema technology that is now extinct (and may have only been a figment of Hughes's imagination). When one of Steddon's films is playing in a theatre in Egypt, the intertitles are projected (in French and Arabic) on two screens adjacent to the main screen, resulting in a pre-Cinerama triptych that allows for optimum multi-lingual enjoyment.

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

As one would expect, Souls for Sale is peppered with star cameos, including Blanche Sweet, Patsy Ruth Miller, Raymond Griffith, Anna Q. Nilsson, and Chester Conklin. But it also features a surprising number of appearances by "star directors," such as King Vidor (The Big Parade [1925]), Fred Niblo (The Mark of Zorro [1920]), and Marshall Neilan (Daddy-Long-Legs [1919]). A plain-faced Charlie Chaplin pretends to direct Mem in another bit. The film also offers a particularly rare glimpse of screenwriter/editor June Mathis (The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse [1921]).

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Most fascinating of all the cameo bits is a scene showing Erich von Stroheim on the set of his legendary 1924 film Greed with an in-costume Jean Hersholt. Other members of Stroheim's stock company who appear in Souls for Sale (in and out of character) are Zasu Pitts, Dale Fuller and Mae Busch.

Rupert Hughes was the brother of oil-drilling magnate Howard Hughes Sr., and it was Rupert who introduced Howard Jr. to the pleasures of Hollywood, which no doubt contributed to his decision to spend his millions running various studios and production companies in the 1920s through the 1950s.

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Rupert Hughes was recruited by Hollywood in 1919, when studio head Samuel Goldwyn launched a campaign to attract the literati to the screen. Other "Goldwyn Eminent Authors" included Mary Roberts Rinehart, Gertrude Atherton, and later, W.S. Maugham. Goldwyn wrote in his 1923 autobiography, "Mr. Hughes's success in photoplays can be ascribed to his prompt recognition of the gulf between two channels of expression – literature and screen – and to his determination to master both the technicalities and spirit of the latter."

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Boardman began her career as a model, and was for years the official "Kodak girl" in the film company's print ads. She won her contract at the Goldwyn Studios as a result of the talent search "New Faces of 1921." Her co-winner was William Haines, who also appears in Souls for Sale as "Pinky." Starting salary at Goldwyn was $75 per week, and she was placed in the supporting cast pool. Hughes personally selected Boardman to be Mem Steddon in Souls for Sale, which was her first starring role.

Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

In 1926, Boardman married director King Vidor (and starred in his 1928 film The Crowd), but their marital bliss was short-lived. They divorced in 1930 and struggled over custody and control of their two daughters for more than a decade. She died in 1991.
Souls for Sale (1923) [Re-UP]

Special Features: None

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