
If you’re looking for a lost masterpiece of the silent era, keep moving. Red Riders of Canada isn’t that. It’s the kind of movie you watch because you’ve already seen the greats and you’re starting to get curious about what the average, workaday B-movie looked like in 1928. It’s for the person who likes the texture of ...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Robert De Lacey

Perry N. Vekroff
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"If you’re looking for a lost masterpiece of the silent era, keep moving. Red Riders of Canada isn’t that. It’s the kind of movie you watch because you’ve already seen the greats and you’re starting to get curious about what the average, workaday B-movie looked like in 1928. It’s for the person who likes the texture of old film grain and doesn’t mind a plot that feels like it was written on a napkin during a lunch break. If you hate slow-moving melodramas where people stare intensely at nothing ..."
Randolph Bartlett, William Byron Mowery, Oliver Drake
United States

