Sterling Pictures
Sterling Pictures was a film company during the silent film era. . Henry Ginsberg headed it.[1] Phil Rosen directed many of Sterling's films. H. R. Ebenstein was the manager of sales.[2] It released series starring Alma Hanlon and Jean Sothern. It also contracted with Anna Q. Nilsson.[2] Arthur F. Beck was the company's president.[3] He married actress and screenwriter Leah Baird.
Filmography
- A Woman's Heart (film) (1926)
- Outcast Souls (1926)
- Devil's Dice (1926)
- Unknown Treasures (1926)
- Men of the Night (1926 film)
- The Closed Gate (1927)[4]
- The Cruel Truth (1927)
- Face Value (1927 film)
- In the First Degree (1927)
- Pretty Clothes (1927)
- Red Signals (1927)[5]
- The Cancelled Debt (1927)
- Stranded (1927 film)[6]
- Marry the Girl (1928 film)
- Undressed (1928)
- Burning Up Broadway (1928)
gollark: I think they took it down because of people complaining.
gollark: Which is, I guess, consistent with human levels of consistency on these issues.
gollark: But it says "it's good" to "maximising paperclips".
gollark: You would say "turning the planet into paperclips" and it would say "it's bad" and such.
gollark: There was actually one AI research organisation recently which made a language model try to capture human common sense ethics.
References
- Quigley, Martin; Monush, Barry (January 1, 1995). "First Century of Film". Quigley Publishing – via page 120.
- "Motography". October 6, 1918 – via Google Books.
- "Dramatic Mirror of Motion Pictures and the Stage". Dramatic Mirror Company. October 6, 1918 – via Google Books.
- Jacobs, Lea (April 2, 2008). "The Decline of Sentiment: American Film in the 1920s". University of California Press – via Google Books.
- Korst, Lindsay (January 3, 2016). "Red Signals 1927".
- Massa, Steve (April 6, 2013). "Lame Brains and Lunatics". BearManor Media – via Google Books.
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