| Index | 10 reviews in total |
16 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
A Cinema Treasure, 19 November 2001
Author:
Son of Cathode from New England
This, the first-ever all-talking motion picture (THE JAZZ SINGER apparently
had some silent patches), is assuredly an important historical document, as
well as a singular theatrical curio, and an aesthetic nightmare. Filmed
primarily on a stage, comprised of large stretches of static dialogue
scenes, this would be seen as a failure from almost any point of view. But
imagine sitting in a theater in 1928, and watching these insipid lines
actually emanating from the
actors' mouths, for the first time! The plot and acting are primal,
even
archetypal, and bring to life an extraordinarily naive melodrama, one might
say a veritable textbook of movie cliches, all bigger than life and entirely
endearing. This really looks more like an early silent film that just
happened to have sound, than a deliberate attempt to test the myriad
possibilities of live-sound recording. In addition to the pedestrian, yet
terribly novel dialogue scenes, there are several song-and-dance numbers
which predict what was really gonna be fun about the talkies! We are also
treated to some brief but breathtaking location shots of circa-1928 Broadway
at night, a neon wonderland and fool's paradise the likes of which we shall
never see again, sadly. For my money, warts and all, LIGHTS OF NEW YORK is
one of cinema's great treasures.
15 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Take him for a ride, 28 September 2001
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Author:
tom.hamilton from London, England
Fascinating and amusingly bad, Lights of New York is the first all talkie
feature and one that almost never saw the light of day.
Two naive barbers (Eddie and Gene) from out of town get involved with
bootleggers and end up fronting a speak. When a cop is shot by one of the
bootleggers the police start to close in, and the Hawk (who shot the
officer) decides to pin the murder on Eddie instructing his henchman to
"take him for a ride". But it's the Hawk himself who takes the bullet in a
twist that will surprise few.
Shot in one week at a cost of $23,000, "Lights" was originally meant as a
two reeler but Foy took advantage of Jack Warner's absence to extend it to
six. When Warner discovered this he ordered Foy to cut it back to the
original short. Only when an independent exhibitor offered $25k for the
film, did Warners actually look at the film, which went on to make a
staggering $1.3 million.
Seen now this is an extremely hokey piece, with acting that ranges from
the
passable (Eugene Pallette) to trance like (Eddie's Granny in a
particularly
risible scene) and much of the playing is at the level of vaudeville.
Since
it's an early talkie (4 part-talkies preceded it) that's about all the
characters do, and very slowly at that. The script feels improvised,
visual
style is non existent (apart from the shooting scene done in silhouette)
and
scenes grind on interminably. Title cards are intercut which redundantly
announce characters and locales.
Despite all this "Lights" is a compelling experience, as we watch actors
and
crew struggling with the alien technology, and changing cinema for
ever.
Catch it if you can
14 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Fascinating Antique, 13 January 2008
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Author:
drednm
LIGHTS OF NEW YORK was the first "all-taking" feature film, coming in
at a brisk 57 minutes and directed by Bryan Foy (of the famous
vaudeville family).
The story has two dopey barbers (Cullen Landis, Eugene Palette)
yearning for a chance at "big city life" and getting involved with
gangsters and bootleg booze. One of the guys gets framed for the murder
of a cop but is saved at the last minute by a gun moll (Gladys
Brockwell).
Much of the story takes place in a night club called The Night Hawk,
which is run by a crook named Hawk (Wheeler Oakman) who has his eye on
a pretty chorine (Helene Costello) who is the girl friend of Landis.
Costello gets to do a brief dance, and we hear Harry Downing (made up
to resemble Ted Lewis) sing "At Dawning) in his best Al Jolson style.
The acting ranges from good (Palette and Brockwell) to awful (Oakman).
A couple of the actors muff their lines but then keep right on with the
scene. As noted elsewhere this was intended to be a short 2-reeler and
was made on a shoestring budget. Yet the sound quality is surprisingly
good, the voices all register clearly, and there is a neat cinematic
touch in the silhouette death.
The film was a box-office smash even though it was shown as a silent
film where theaters were not wired for the new sound technology. No one
expected this little film to gross an amazing $1.3 million. It briefly
made stars of Costello and Landis and certainly launched Palette on his
long career as a star character actor.
Co-stars include Mary Carr as the mother, Robert Elliott as the
detective, Eddie Kane as the street cop, and Tom Dugan as a thug.
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Un-gradable!, 13 January 2005
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Author:
jbacks3-1 from Denver
Okay so I gave this a 6 but to be fair you can't grade Lights of New York in any ordinary sense. The camera's immobile, the acting's on par with lumber and the script's below second-rate. I love the dialog--- Wheeler Oakman's "But... they... must not... find... Eddie" and the infamous, "Take.. him... for... A... ride" is stupifyingly awful (further proof of his thespian skills can be seen in his death scene... then he keeps on breathing!). But hey, this was the very first all-talking movie! There's every reason in the world to make allowances for every one of it's shortcomings. I've seen The Jazz Singer released around 8 months earlier and this represented a huge leap over part-talkies. It's hard to be overly critical on the technical aspects when it's apparent that everyone was dealing with new fangled sound and heavily soundproofed cameras--- not to mention sound requiring completely new types of direction. This is a gem that deserves to be seen and judged for what it is, a historical artifact. Eugene Palette is the best actor here (no surprise).
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
The first all talking picture is loads of fun, 27 June 2009
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Author:
calvinnme from United States
Lights of New York was the first all-talking feature film. There had
been, of course, The Jazz Singer, released in Oct. 1927 as the first
feature film incorporating synchronized dialog. However, this film
released in July 1928 is virtually unremembered for its place in film
history. It had started out as a short, but gradually more was tacked
on until - clocking in at 58 minutes - it accidentally became the first
all-talking feature film. It opened to a grind house run and to Warner
Bros. surprise, made over a million dollars. That was good money back
in 1928.
The plot is quite simple. Two country barbers naively buy into a barber
shop on Broadway that fronts as a speak-easy for "The Hawk", a
gangster. When they learn the truth they can't afford to get out,
because the younger barber, Eddie, has all of his mother's money tied
up in the place. Kitty is the younger barber's girlfriend, and gangster
Hawk (Wheeler Oakman) has an eye for turning in his older girlfriend
(Gladys Brockwell) for a newer model - chorus girl Kitty(Helene
Costello). A cop is killed while trying to stop the Hawk's men from
unloading a shipment of bootleg liquor, and the Hawk sees it as an
opportunity to frame Eddie, thus getting Kitty for himself.
This early talkie is loads of fun for the enthusiast of these
pioneering works. Sure, the plot is elementary and the dialog stilted,
but there is something you don't see much of in early talkies -
background musical scoring. Vitaphone had originally been used for this
very purpose, and here they are still using it for musical
accompaniment along with the dialog. And there are singing and dancing
numbers! The scenes in Hawk's nightclub are used as an opportunity to
show off what films could never do before - musical numbers. There is
even a wild-eyed emcee with some heavy makeup left over from the silent
era that is a hoot to watch.
Vitaphone could not go outdoors at this point due to the static camera
booths, so the scene in the park between the two lovers Eddie and Kitty
is simulated - and cheaply. The greenery looks like something out of an
Ed Wood movie or perhaps a high school production of "Our Town".
Gladys Brockwell, as the Hawk's castoff girlfriend, delivers her lines
with punch. She's a real trooper considering what lines she has to
deliver. To the Hawk - "So you think you can have any chicken you want
and throw me back in the deck!". Huh? mixed metaphors anyone? And then
there are her final lines "I've lived, and I've loved, and I've lost!"
Did someone get paid to write this dialog? Brockwell was making a good
success of her talkie career after scoring some triumphs in silent
films (the evil sister in "Seventh Heaven"), when a fatal car accident
cut her career short.
Then there is Eugene Palette - the older of the two barbers in our
story. His frog voice, natural delivery of lines, and cuddly appearance
gave him a long career as a character actor usually appearing as a
put-upon family man/businessman with a gruff exterior and heart of
gold. In fact, Mr. Palette is the only member of this cast who still
has a notable career in films just three years after this movie is
released.
Finally there is the question of "where is that microphone hidden?"
Microphones were still stationary at this point, and it's fun to figure
out where they've hidden it. There is one famous scene, though, where
everybody can pretty much figure it out. Hawk is in his office talking
to his two henchman - who seem to comprehend as slowly as they talk -
about "taking Eddie for a ride". If you watch this scene you'd swear
the phone on the desk is a character in this film. It's front and
center during the whole conversation. The microphone is likely planted
in the phone.
There is something heroic about these pioneers flying blind in the face
of the new technology of sound. You have silent actors who are
accustomed to using pantomime for expression, vaudevillians who know
how to play to a live audience but don't know how to make the same
impression on a Vitaphone camera booth, and you have dialog writers
either trying to write conversation as compactly as they did title
cards or filling up films with endless chatter.
Check this one out. It is not boring, moves fast, and is loads of fun
if you know what to look for. And no, I don't expect this one to ever
be out on Blu-Ray, but I hope that the folks at Warner Brothers add it
to the Warner Archive soon so everyone can see it.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Not too bad for a first effort, 30 November 2006
Author:
edalweber from United States
It is easy to criticism this movie,which has so many shortcomings.But in all fairness we must remember what handicaps everyone was working under.Actors had to speak slowly,and enunciate very precisely to make sure that the primitive microphones could pick up what they were saying.The fact that they were shooting an entire feature as a talkie, instead of just a few isolated scenes,as in previous "talkies",undoubtedly put extra pressure on everyone. To my mind one of the funniest(unintended) aspects of is, when Hawk was telling his two henchmen to "take him for a ride", one of the henchmen looked, and was dressed, like Stan Laurel! Sort of hard to take him seriously as a hit-man! Primitive as it was,this was still a wonder to audiences who had grown weary of the limitations of silent movies.I have always like old silents, but a steady,exclusive diet would get tiresome very quickly.The jeering reaction of the audience in "Singin in the Rain" to the shortcomings of "The Dueling Cavalier" was an anachronism;that is the reaction of an audience used to PERFECTED sound movies.An actual audience of the day might have laughed,but still would have loved it.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Big City Blues, 30 November 2009
Author:
lugonian from Kissimmee, Florida
When someone asks the question, "What was the first talking picture?"
the answer that immediately comes to mind is THE JAZZ SINGER (1927)
starring Al Jolson. Well, that's partially correct. For anyone who's
never seen THE JAZZ SINGER might expect an all-sound motion picture
with songs. In retrospect, THE JAZZ SINGER does include songs, but much
of the scenario was silent accompanied by a Vitaphone orchestral score.
With other major studios experimenting the methods of silent films by
adding talking sequences to its existing underscoring and inter-titles,
LIGHTS OF NEW YORK (Warner Brothers, 1928), directed by Bryan Foy,
scripted by Murray Roth and Hugh Herbert, was a step in the right
direction for being the first all-talking feature length movie. As with
many Hollywood firsts, LIGHTS OF NEW YORK was and still is not a great
film due to awkward acting and offbeat dialogue, yet the result is
another landmark during the dawn of sound made essential to the history
of motion pictures.
Opening with a prologue, the first inter-title reads: "This is a story
of Main Street and Broadway - a story that might have been torn out of
last night's newspaper. Main Street - 45 minutes from Broadway - but a
thousand miles away." Because his girlfriend, Kitty Lewis, has gone to
New York and made a success for herself, Eddie Morgan (Cullen Landis),
a barber yearning for a better life outside his small own where nothing
ever happens, asks his mother (Mary Carr), proprietor of the Morgan
Hotel, for a $5,000 loan so that he and his friend, Gene (Eugene
Palette) can go into partnership with Jake Jackson (Walter Percival)
and Dan Dickson (Jere Delaney), guests in Room 21. At first Mrs. Morgan
relents loaning the money until she meets with these "gentlemen" before
heading back to New York the following morning. Story: "Broadway - 45
minutes from Main Street, but a million miles away." Six months pass.
Eddie and Gene, owners of the White Way Barber Shop on 46th Street,
come to realize their big mistake for being talked into having their
barbershop as a front for bootleggers. Unknown to Eddie, "Hawk" Miller
(Wheeler Oakman), owner of the Night Hawk Club ("where anything can
happen and usually does") is not only the ring leader of the bootleg
operation, but out to get his Kitty, dancer at his club, for himself,
much to the jealous nature of Molly Thompson (Gladys Brockwell), his
rejected mistress. As Miller plots to do away with Eddie by placing the
boxes of Old Century liquor in his barbershop, Miller is later shot and
killed by a mysterious assassin, leaving poor Eddie as the prime
suspect.
A straightforward melodrama with an amusing bit reminiscent of a
vaudeville routine where a drunk approaches a cop (Eddie Kane) on
Broadway asking where the other side of the street is. For a motion
picture that began as a two-reel Vitaphone short, LIGHTS OF NEW YORK,
with its backstage musical sounding title, is basically an underworld
melodrama with gangster types speaking in gangster lingo. The most
memorable line comes from Wheeler Oakman giving an order to his boys,
Sam and Tommy (Tom Dugan and Guy D'Ennery) about Eddie, to "Take him
... for ... a ride." This particular scene is the one usually clipped
into documentaries of motion pictures, especially when the subject
matter is about early talkies. The film is also historical in a sense
in offering a inside glimpse of 1920s night clubs better known then as
"speakeasies," consisting of chorus girls, dancing patrons and one
vocalization of "At Dawning" by the master of ceremonies (Harry
Downing).
With no "major star" names in the cast, the only one of some
familiarity is Eugene Palette, whose distinctive gravel voice made
recognizable during his long range of character parts lasting through
the late 1940s. His one crucial scene finds him trying to hide the fact
from a couple of detectives (Robert Elliott and Tom McGuire) that the
customer sitting in his barber chair with his face covered with a towel
happens to be a recently murdered Hawk Miller. Aside from Palette and
Tom Dugan, other members of the cast, namely silent screen veterans
Cullen Landis and Helene Costello, have virtually drifted to obscurity
shortly after this film's release. Gladys Brockwell as the girl "who's
loved and lost," gives a type of performance of a middle-aged Joan
Crawford from the 1960s. Sadly Brockwell passed away the following year
(1929) from complications sustained in an automobile accident.
For being 1928 production, LIGHTS OF NEW YORK has an advance appeal of
one made in the 1940s, not by Warners but something out of a Monogram
Pictures programmer. Visual effects with shadows of bootleggers
committing their crimes at night simply has that 1940s film noir feel
to it. Often labeled as a very bad picture by historians, this remains
a real curio as it did way back when, as well as a great opportunity
hearing the voices of actors of the silent screen.
Never distributed on video cassette, LIGHTS OF NEW YORK can be found
occasionally on Turner Classic Movies where it's been playing since May
13, 1995. So the next time someone asks, "What was the first talking
picture?" chances are the reply may still be THE JAZZ SINGER, but the
final answer remains THE LIGHTS OF NEW YORK. As far as silent films are
concerned, there's no turning back now. (**)
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
LIGHTS OF NEW YORK (Bryan Foy, 1928) ***, 17 February 2011
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
Though mainly notable for being the first "100% Talkie", this one is
still reasonably well-regarded; it is also a fine example of an early
gangster film incidentally, I have a handful of other such efforts
unwatched from that first initial burst within this most invigorating
of genres.
That said, the mobster of this one is more akin to the hissable villain
from some old barnstormer, complete with pencil-thin moustache, rather
than the larger-than-life types (fast-talking, no-nonsense, eventually
hysterical) subsequently made their own at the same studio, Warners,
no less by the likes of Robinson, Cagney and Bogart! Even so, the
action here is extremely modest being relegated to the silhouetted
shooting of a cop during a bootlegging 'job' and the behind-the-curtain
execution of the villain. The aftermath of the latter sequence,
however, elevates the suspense quotient considerably as the killing
occurs in a barber shop immediately prior to a police 'raid'
so that
the victim is put up in a chair by the owner (Eugene Palette), lathered
and generally treated as any other customer, before he slips down to
the floor!
The rest of the cast is made up of now-forgotten actors (apart from a
young Tom Dugan the Hitler impersonator from Lubitsch's TO BE OR NOT
TO BE [1942] as one of the hoodlum's stooges, here looking an awful
lot like Lon Chaney!). Still, the performances (ditto the plot of
small-town love rekindled in the big city, the fleecing/selling of
naïve fellows by slick-looking-but-obviously-slimy-heels, and the
jilted ageing mistress furnishing the villain's inevitable
come-uppance) are all delightfully of their time, and the film itself
very enjoyable if approached in the right frame-of-mind. Indeed, the
only major let-downs here are the static camera-work and the wholly
resistible (yet obligatory) musical numbers. By the way, the director
had been one of the "Seven Little Foys", sons of popular vaudevillian
Eddie Foy; he later changed gears to producing, with perhaps his most
successful effort being the 3-D horror classic HOUSE OF WAX (1953).
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
"Take him.....for.....a ride"!!!, 21 March 2010
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Author:
kidboots from Australia
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"Lights of New York" originally started out as an experimental two reel
Vitaphone short that eventually snowballed into the first all talkie
feature film. Helene Costelle was supposedly one of the most beautiful
actresses in Hollywood and sister to (in my opinion the real beauty)
Dolores Costello, who seemed to get all the breaks. Poor Helene is best
known for appearing in this pretty dreary film that bought a revolution
to Hollywood!!
Two bootleggers on the lam in "Main Street" convince a couple of small
town barbers to try their luck on Broadway. The barbers Eddie (Cullen
Landis) and Gene (Eugene Palette) don't realise that their barber shop
is soon a cover for illegal bootlegging activities. They soon do
realise it and regret the day they left their small town. The only
thing keeping them going is the loan that Eddie's mother gave them and
that they desperately want to pay back. Eddie becomes re-acquainted
with Kitty Lewis (Helene Costello) a girl from his home town who has
made good on Broadway. Kitty is worried about "Hawk" Miller (Wheeler
Oakman) who is always hanging around her but Eddie, innocently, thinks
she is exaggerating as "Hawk" already has a girlfriend Molly (Gladys
Brockwell) but to reassure her he gives her a little handgun to
frighten unwanted admirers away. "Hawk", who has killed a police
officer and has the "Feds" closing in, decides to frame Eddie.
Meanwhile Molly is getting pretty fed up with "Hawks" treatment of her
and after a showdown where he tells her he is after a chicken and not
an old hen the stage is set for - Murder!!!
The fact is it isn't completely awful, apart from gangsters and
showgirls alike speaking in their best elocution voices and that was
still happening in films in 1930. Gladys Brockwell (if a trifle
melodramatic) and Eugene Palette (quite natural) were okay and were the
most seasoned actors in the cast. There was no John or Ethel Barrymore
to be seen - Cullen Landis and Helene Costello soon returned to the
obscurity from which they had come. I also didn't notice much of the
"hidden mike" - where people had to be grouped around different objects
ie a telephone or sitting on a couch before they could engage in
conversation. People who saw it at the cinema probably started to think
that all policeman talked in that flat monotone as that trend continued
in many early talkies ie "Little Caesar" (1930). In any case they were
probably intrigued by the novelty of a completely all talkie - with
some singing and dancing - film in 1928.
Recommended.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Important Historical Film, 21 December 2009
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Author:
Diosprometheus from United States
This is an important historical film since it was the the first
all-talking feature film.
The film was made for a mere 23,000 dollars.
It grossed over a million dollars upon its release.
This film all so helped define the gangster melodramas that were to
become the bread and butter of the Warner's studio in the 1930's.
The popularity of this film ended the silent era more so than its more
famous part-talkie predecessor, the Jazz Singer. The film deserves its
place in history and not as a mere footnote.
The only actor who might be remember today that is in it was Eugene
Palette.
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