Cobra (Joseph Henabery, 1925) DVDRip VOSE

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Jacob
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Cobra (Joseph Henabery, 1925) DVDRip VOSE

Mensaje por Jacob » Lun 17 Sep, 2007 17:39

Justiniano Conquián en [url=http://www.cine-clasico.com/foros/viewtopic.php?p=89000#89000]Cine-Clásico[/url] escribió:
Cobra (Joseph Henabery 1925) DVDrip VOI
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Directed by Joseph Henabery.
Screen play by Anthony Coldewey.
Adapted from a play by Martin Brown as produced by I. Lawrence Weber.
A Paramount Release.
Setting by William Cameron Menzies.
Photography by J.D. Jennings & Harry A Fishbeck.
Edited by John H. Bonn.
First Asst. Director Richard Johnston.
Second Asst. Director Barton Adams.
Costume designs by Adrian. Executed by Lillian M. Turner.
Technical Director Eugene Hornbostel

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Cast:
Rudolph Valentino ... Count Rodrigo Torriani
Hector Sarno ... Vittorio Minardi
Casson Ferguson ... Jack Dorning
Claire de Lorez ... Rosa Minardi
Gertrude Olmstead ... Mary Drake
Henry A. Barrows ... Henry Madison (as Henry Barrows)
Nita Naldi ... Elise Van Zile
Lillian Langdon ... Mrs. Huntington Palmer
Eileen Percy ... Sophie Binner

Runtime:70 min
Country:USA
Color:Black and White
Aspect Ratio:1.33 : 1
Sound Mix:Silent
Company:Ritz-Carlton Pictures

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Synopsis
Valentino plays Count Rodrigo Torriani, an Italian noble. A charming libertine, his weakness is women--the "cobras" referred to in the title of the film.
Rodrigo accepts an invitation from friend Jack Dorning (Ferguson) to come to New York City to work as an antiques expert. While the job is rewarding, Rodrigo finds the temptation from the women surrounding him, including Dorning's secretary Mary Drake (Olmstead) and wife Elise (Naldi) challenging.

The production of Cobra was marred by bickering and soaring production costs. Furthermore, its studio Paramount Pictures, unhappy with the final film and fearing it would flop with audiences and critics, held off releasing it until Valentino (whose popularity had declined somewhat) appeared in a stronger, unequivocally successful picture. Eventually Cobra was released in late 1925, a few weeks after what proved to be Valentino's comeback feature, The Eagle.
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Review byDavid Pierce
Some silent films offer large pleasures- the beautiful photography of Docks of New York- the effortless physicality of Buster Keaton in The General- the battle scenes in Wings. Cobra, on the other hand, is a film where the viewer has to be satisfied with small pleasures. The overall film doesn't work, and it lumbers from one unlikely event to the next. But individual scenes often shine within the film in which they are stranded.
One of Rudolph Valentino's independent productions, Cobra is a handsome film, and after the powdered wigs of the previous year's Monsieur Beaucaire, it is welcome to see Valentino in modern clothes. Virtually the entire story takes place indoors on gorgeously appointed sets designed by William Cameron Menzies.
Although based on a stage play, Cobra feels like a story written by a succession of writers. The first writes the opening scene in Italy to establish Valentino's character as an incorrigible womanizer. The second author throws in a historical flashback. With a minimal transition, the third author takes the story to Manhattan with an entirely different mood introducing Valentino to good-girl Gertrude Astor. The fourth writer sends the plot in a new direction with Valentino and vamp Nita Naldi, and so it goes.
The opening sequence is a delight- a faux Lubitsch scene as Valentino escapes from the vengeful father of one of his many girlfriends. The irate papa misidentifies a passerby as the guilty party, and Valentino emerges to vouch for the innocence of the accused. Joseph Henabery, a Griffith disciple, was no Lubitsch, nor even a Monta Bell, but he still manages to pull off the sequence smartly.
The historical sequence is another delight as Valentino tries to demonstrate to his friend the hereditary nature of his difficulty with women. In a flashback to one of Valentino's nobleman ancestors, an irate husband is about to interrupt Rudy with the man's wife, so Valentino hides her behind a convenient wall curtain. When the husband storms in, Valentino disappoints him by showing him a different woman in hiding. Satisfied, the husband leaves, but his very annoyed wife emerges to chide Valentino for his infidelity.
Another highlight is a little throwaway scene where Valentino insists to Gertrude Olmstead, the secretary he desires but resists his advances, that he has given up his womanizing. As they are getting into his car, a woman in a passing car blows him a kiss. He tries to explain, and Olmstead begins to smirk, he realizes it is foolish to continue, and they dissolve in laughter.
Oddly, much of the key 'action' in the film occurs offscreen. A potentially big scene of a fatal hotel fire is communicated by a newspaper article (possibly the result of the film being financed by the owners of the Ritz-Carlton hotel). Valentino, an actor with tremendous magnetism, is romancing women throughout the film- at one point he identifies himself as what would now be called a sexual predator- but there are no love scenes. Valentino says "women fascinate me, as the cobra does its victim," but we never see anyone get bitten!
While there are some moments of self-satire, the film tries to be both serious and tongue-in-cheek. The best Douglas Fairbanks films could be both at the same time; the best Cobra can manage is to alternate between them. At one point a doctor warns Valentino of the health of his friend: "I am afraid of a nervous breakdown- he must be watched every moment- the slightest shock might unsettle his brain." Despite this howler, the plot thread, like many others, never leads anywhere. Fortunately, the version of Cobra on video from Kino on Video and on laserdisc from Image Entertainment shows the film to its finest advantage. Working from a nitrate lavender master positive, the laserdisc and video are sharp and clear, except for shots obviously photographed soft-focus for effect. The score of period music was compiled by Rodney Sauer and performed by the Mont Alto Theatre Orchestra. While the end credits only list five performers it sounds like more, and the music provides the right balance of playfulness and emotional support, at times saving Cobra from self-satire. (Review © 1998 David Pierce)
David Pierce

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E-link encontrado en la mula:
ed2k linkCobra (Joseph Henabery, 1925, with Rudolph Valentino).avi ed2k link stats

Subs en español gracias a Fede:

Opensubtitles - Subdivx
Y gracias a Justiniano.
Última edición por Jacob el Mar 18 Sep, 2007 17:48, editado 4 veces en total.

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Nalekh
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Mensaje por Nalekh » Lun 17 Sep, 2007 19:05

Una de las mejores (por lo que he oido) de Valentino. Habrá que verla. Gracias por el aviso.

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Norman_Bates
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Mensaje por Norman_Bates » Mar 18 Sep, 2007 20:15

- Pincho, gracias Jacob.
"El mejor amigo de un muchacho es su madre"

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locutus
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Mensaje por locutus » Sab 22 Sep, 2007 20:29

Pinchando. Gracias Jacob & Federico.

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edusus
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Re: Cobra (Joseph Henabery, 1925) DVDRip VOSE

Mensaje por edusus » Mié 19 Feb, 2020 10:01

Pinchada, gracias!
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kabuki
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Registrado: Dom 03 Oct, 2004 02:00

Re: Cobra (Joseph Henabery, 1925) DVDRip VOSE

Mensaje por kabuki » Jue 20 Feb, 2020 18:51

Muchas gracias,Jacob.