The Danger Signal (1925) Poster

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8/10
A heartwarming melodrama with exciting train sequences.
jennyp-217 August 2005
Columbia Pictures Corporation was still a young Poverty Row contender in 1925 when The Danger Signal, one of at least 21 productions shot by the studio that year, was released. Originally named CBC Film Sales for its founders, brothers Harry and Jack Cohn and attorney Jack Brandt, the motion picture company was soon given the nickname of "Corned Beef & Cabbage" by rivals in the field, much to the mortification of Harry who pushed for the more dignified moniker. In the three years since the company was formed, they had become successful enough to purchase two stages and an office building on Sunset Blvd. Trade ads from this period boast, "Every picture will have a box office cast!" While Dorothy Revier and Robert Gordon might not have been in the same league with Pickford and Fairbanks, their faces were certainly familiar to audiences of the day. Indeed, Revier was named a WAMPAS Baby star in 1925, an honor bestowed by the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers to thirteen young women they believed to be the most promising up-and-comers that year. Gordon had costarred with a Pickford (Mary's brother Jack) in Tom Sawyer (1917) and Huck and Tom (1918) as Huckleberry Finn and hadn't been out of work since. Jane Novak (who was interestingly a year younger than Gordon, who played her son) was no slouch either, having appeared in 60 or more films before The Danger Signal, sharing the bill with such notable leading men as William S. Hart, Hobart Bosworth, Tom Mix and Lewis Stone.

Once believed to be a lost film (according to the "Lost Film Files" page on the Silents are Golden web site), a nitrate print of The Danger Signal was purchased by the Library of Congress from a private collector in 2003 and a duplicate negative and safety print were struck this year. The original nitrate material is about 900 feet short of the 5502' listed in the AFI catalog and for reasons that can only be guessed at, scenes were put together wildly out of order. After the safety print was made, it was cut and reassembled into sequence, a job not unlike putting together a jigsaw puzzle without the benefit of the picture on the box. Descriptions of the story in publications from the time (Harrison's Reports and Exhibitors Weekly) proved to be sketchy at best and inaccurate (getting even the character's names wrong) at worst. Harrison's and Variety both praised the acting and direction of the film however, with the former stating that those attributes "…lifted it well out of the class of average productions." The story is a melodrama – sort of Stella Dallas meets The Corsican Brothers. A recently widowed and destitute young mother (Jane Novak) appeals to her wealthy and heartless father-in-law (Robert Edeson) for financial aid. Instead, he convinces her to hand over her new baby to his care so that the child will be brought up with "everything money can buy." Unbeknownst to the grandfather, we learn that there are twin sons and our heroine keeps one baby to raise herself. The narrative jumps ahead to the boy's twenty-first birthday and we see what's become of them. Not surprisingly, the wealthy son has grown up spoiled and greedy while the poor one works hard and loves his mother.

Some special moments to watch for are the rich son's enormous birthday cake complete with a model train circling it, a tender moment when Novak strokes her lost son's discarded glove and remembers caressing his hand when he was an infant, and an exciting runaway train sequence near the end that will have you biting your nails.
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8/10
DANGER SIGNAL was no danger – but it was a surprise HIT with the Cinecon (2005) audience.
larry41onEbay10 September 2005
Dateline: Hollywood, Saturday, September 3, 2005.

From the moment Cinecon festival host Bob Birchard walked out in front of the audience at the Egyptian Theater to announce that Jenny Paxson of The Library of Congress was here to talk about THE DANGER SIGNAL before the screening, the mood was eager anticipation. Meanwhile Jenny, from the back row of the balcony shouted, "WHAT!?" (It seems the staff had forgotten to ask her…) As she dashed downstairs, Bob continued, "Jenny said she would love to introduce the film," and a voice from the stairwell responded, "NO I DIDN'T!" which broke up the crowd. As Jenny tried to catch her breath, she explained how this newly struck print of a formerly lost film came about. The Library of Congress recently acquired an old nitrate print of the title in a recently purchased collection. Unfortunately, the print was put together out of sequence and some footage was missing. By making notes on index cards of each scene, she was able to resequence the new safety print into a cohesive story. Even though some scenes and title cards were missing and a few shots showed brief decomposition, the performances and the story were so involving as to make up for the brief jumps in the film. Out of breath but relieved, Jenny said she hoped the audience would enjoy this premiere screening of the new print. As the film unrolled and the now prepared audience watched, they let their guard down and let the film in. Accompanist Gabriel Thibodeau's score set the tone from the melodramatic opening all the way through to the exciting runaway train climax and the crowd responded with enthusiastic applause. When spectators expressed appreciation of the film to Jenny after the screening, she praised the work of Library of Congress quality control technicians Bruce Horrell and James Cozart for the restoration of a once lost silent gem. Now with this fresh find, film buff's batteries will be recharged to find and restore more titles! See it if you can at The Library Of Congress, Packard Campus for Audio-Visual Conservation in Culpeper, Virginia this September 18th, 2010 at 7:30pm and it's FREE!
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