Viewing this DVD edition was generally a pleasant experience. With this home video edition being our first viewing of The Garden of Eden (1928), we were happy to have discovered the film’s simple charm and to view more performances by Corinne Griffith and Charles Ray.
The film has been well transferred in a slightly windowboxed presentation from a very-good to excellent 35mm print, with a few minor flaws that include moderate emulsion scuffing, some scratches and dirt, etc. The windowbox framing allows as much of the print’s picture to be seen on all televisions. The main credits and certain insert shots of letters have been framed in smaller windowboxes to ensure full readability of the frame’s content.
The DVD itself has been well prepared. The transfer to disc maintains much of the quality of the source transfer as well, with very good looking still frames and no obvious interlacing artifacts that are often the result of overcompression of the video information.
Robert Israel has provided another fine music score (digitally recorded), performed on an Allen Renaissance theater pipe organ and piano. It is worth noting that Israel’s work never fails to please.
Among the supplementary materials are a collection of lobby cards, cast bios, newspaper ads, promotional materials and stories, and suggested promotional schemes from the 1928 press book; ten productions stills; a section “Color in The Garden of Eden,” which covers the presumed lost Technicolor dream sequence that was originally in 1928 prints and includes more exerpts from the 1928 press book and also seven stills from the sequence. For our reviews of the supplemental films, see our The Toy Shop on home video and Hollywood the Unusual on home video pages.
We certainly welcome the future efforts of this new home video company — especially if they will be bringing more generally-unknown, quality silent era films to the home video market. We recommend this disc, which is unfortunately now out-of-print.
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USA: Click the logomark to purchase this Region 0 NTSC DVD edition from Amazon.com. Your purchase supports Silent Era.
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Canada: Click the logomark to purchase this Region 0 NTSC DVD edition from Amazon.ca. Your purchase supports Silent Era.
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