Sunday 2 October 2011
Frank Borsage, Forgotten Director
Although Frank Borsage is a less well known director than some of his contemporaries, such as Alfred Hitchcock or George Cukor, he was exceptionally successful in the era spanning the end of the Silents and beginning of the Talkies.
The very first Oscar for Directing was won by Borsage in 1927 for his 'Seventh Heaven' starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell, and he soon won a second Oscar for Direction for 'Bad Girl' in 1931.
Borsage developed his own unique, gushing and lovingly romantic style and his films often show young love triumphant over life's hardships. So in 'Seventh Heaven', for example, love triumphs over the problems of war, and in 'Lucky Star' in 1929 it triumphs over disability. The heightened romanticism of his work is intensified by his clever use of graceful, barely discernible, soft focus camerawork.
Frank Borsage biography and filmography.
Labels:
1920's,
1930's,
directors,
frank borsage,
george cukor
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