Hit of the Show

Hit of the Show is a 1928 comedy film directed by Ralph Ince and starring Joe E. Brown, Gertrude Olmstead and William Bailey.[1] It was originally released as a silent, with some sound added to later versions.

Hit of the Show
Directed byRalph Ince
Written byEnid Hibbard
Edgar Allan Woolf
CinematographyRobert Martin
Edited byGeorge M. Arthur
Production
company
Distributed byFBO
Release date
July 8, 1928
Running time
72 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent
English intertitles

Cast

gollark: You mention near-infrared, which is apparently absorbed somewhat less than other wavelengths by skin and such, but based on my 30 second duckduckgo search it's still scattered and absorbed a decent amount by that and probably is blocked by the skull, which is where the brain is.
gollark: In any case, would most lasers *not* just be blocked by the skull and not interact with brain tissue anyway?
gollark: This is probably more of an issue for neuroscientists than... people with lasers.
gollark: Oh, and magnetic thingies and lasers are very different.
gollark: <@542811977383280662> Talking in <#482370338324348932> is annoying so I'll say it here: the current state of brain interaction stuff seems to be at the level of just hamfistedly meddling with large regions of the brain, not anything targeted enough to make people "super intelligent".

References

Citations

  1. Quinlan p.152

Sources

  • Quinlan, David. The Illustrated Guide to Film Directors. Batsford, 1983.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.