Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Great Gatsby is a 1926 American silent drama film directed by Herbert Brenon. It was the first film adaptation of the 1925 novel of the same name by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Warner Baxter portrayed Jay Gatsby and Lois Wilson portrayed Daisy Buchanan. The film was produced by Famous Players–Lasky, and distributed by Paramount Pictures.

  2. The Great Gatsby: Directed by Herbert Brenon. With Warner Baxter, Lois Wilson, Neil Hamilton, Georgia Hale. Nick Carraway, a young Midwesterner now living on Long Island, finds himself fascinated by the mysterious past and lavish lifestyle of his neighbour, the nouveau riche Jay Gatsby.

    • Herbert Brenon
    • 1926-08-27
    • Drama
    • 80
  3. Año: 1926. Título original: The Great Gatsby. Sinopsis: Nick Carraway, un joven del medio oeste que vive en Long Island, vive fascinado con el fastuoso estilo de vida de su vecino, Jay Gatsby. Se verá inmerso en su círculo, siendo testigo de la obsesión y la tragedia.

    • Leo Tover (B&W)
    • Herbert Brenon
    • Estados Unidos
    • Drama. Romance | Drama romántico
  4. 14 de may. de 2013 · The “Gatsby” film that gets the party scenes right is the lost 1926 version, of which only this trailer has survived.

  5. 4 de may. de 2014 · Gatsby’s carefully laid scheme to announce his intentions to take Daisy away from her cloddish husband Tom Buchanan goes horribly awry, setting the stage for the inexorable tragedies that follow. The film was first a stage play on Broadway at the Ambassador Theatre in New York City.

  6. On a summer night in Louisville, in 1917, Jay Gatsby, a young Army officer, falls in love with Daisy Fay, a society belle; before leaving for the war, Gatsby swears that he will raise himself to her social station, and they avow their undying love.

  7. “The reck­less dri­ving that results in the death of Myr­tle Wil­son serves to bring out a ster­ling trait in Gats­by’s char­ac­ter,” New York Times crit­ic Mour­daunt Hall wrote (in 1926) of a mem­o­rable scene in the nov­el that seems to have become a mem­o­rable scene in the film.