An original documentary that utilizes numerous still images, never-before-seen clips to chronicle the life and career of one of the silent screen's most prolific and fascinating stars, Ameri... Read allAn original documentary that utilizes numerous still images, never-before-seen clips to chronicle the life and career of one of the silent screen's most prolific and fascinating stars, American film actor and director, Francis X. Bushman.An original documentary that utilizes numerous still images, never-before-seen clips to chronicle the life and career of one of the silent screen's most prolific and fascinating stars, American film actor and director, Francis X. Bushman.
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Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
Francis X. Bushman: [remembrances of Chaplin] We all lined up at noontime, you know, and Charlie, he would have his drink, you know, but he always moved around, we noticed. So that he never, in all the time that he was there, bought a round of drinks!
- ConnectionsFeatures The Great Train Robbery (1903)
The pinnacle of Bushman's career was in the 1910s when he was perhaps the most popular leading man--maybe only being eclipsed in stardom by the likes of Mary Pickford or Charlie Chaplin, the latter of whom joined Bushman at Essanay for a time and whose Essanay short "His New Job" (1915) the documentary suggests poked fun at Bushman's persona. Bushman was best known for his romantic coupling with co-star Beverly Bayne on screen, such as in the now lost 1916 Metro version of "Romeo and Juliet," which Fox tried to imitate and beat to market with their own version starring vamp Theda Bara and which is also now lost. Bushman and Bayne's careers languished after their real-life marriage and the press scandal of Bushman reportedly abandoning his child and first wife (of four women he'd marry throughout his life), although it would soon be eclipsed by other Hollywood scandals including Fatty Arbuckle's trials for rape and manslaughter, the murder of William Desmond Taylor and the rumored one of Thomas H. Ince, the drug-related deaths of Wallace Reed and Olive Thomas, and others.
Despite his comeback in what is probably his best remembered role as Messala in "Ben-Hur" (1925), Louis B. Mayer reportedly being the schmuck he's often been reported as having been, blacklisted Bushman over, according to Bushman, a salary dispute. It was the theatre, radio and parts in poverty-row film productions from there on out until Bushman began getting some small parts in big studio productions--especially after Mayer's tenure at MGM ended. A dramatization of the murder of silent film director William Desmond Taylor, "Hollywood Story" (1951), and made to capitalize on the success of "Sunset Boulevard" (1950) sounds especially intriguing to me. I would also love to see Lois Weber's "The Marriage Clause" (1926), which starred Bushman in a reportedly John Barrymore type role of an alcoholic star on the wane. Heck, I haven't even seen any of Bushman and Bayne's on-screen couplings, either, and they seem to be in short supply these days.
Bushman was one of the first and biggest movie stars and who has since fallen into obscurity. That alone makes him a good subject for a documentary, and although this one mostly merely follows his career from muscular model for bronze statues to senior-citizen motivational speaker, Bushman was continually working in a public role, so "This Is Francis X. Bushman" fits the bill.
- Cineanalyst
- Sep 5, 2021
Details
- Runtime1 hour
- Color