あらすじ
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Commentary (films not included). Pages: 28. Chapters: Ninotchka, The Love Parade, One Hour with You, To Be or Not to Be, The Smiling Lieutenant, Heaven Can Wait, The Shop Around the Corner, Trouble in Paradise, Lady Windermere's Fan, The Oyster Princess, Ernst Lubitsch filmography, Design for Living, If I Had a Million, That Lady in Ermine, Rosita, Paramount on Parade, The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, Broken Lullaby, Angel, Monte Carlo, The Merry Widow, The Patriot, That Uncertain Feeling, Bluebeard's Eighth Wife, A Royal Scandal, Cluny Brown, The Marriage Circle, Forbidden Paradise, Eternal Love, Three Women, Anna Boleyn, Kohlhiesels Tochter, The Doll, Kiss Me Again, Sumurun, The Wild Cat, I Don't Want to Be a Man. Excerpt: The Oyster Princess (German: ) is a 1919 German silent film directed by Ernst Lubitsch. It is a grotesque comedy in 4 acts about an American millionaire's spoiled daughter's marriage that just doesn't go as planned. The film earned fame from his intangible use of style and sophistication in this movie among others. The term for his style was later dubbed "The Lubitsch Touch." The American oyster King dictates to a room full of typing writing women. He smokes a large cigar held by one of his many butlers at his side. One butler scurrys in to say, "Your daughter is in a fit of raging madness" Ossi, in the other room, has destroyed the room by throwing everything onto the floor. Mister Quaker oddly jogs through the house to see Ossi on the other side of the mansion. When Mister Quaker peeps in, Ossi throws newspapers at him. He asks, "Why are you throwing those newspapers?" and the brat replies with, "Because all of the vases are broken." Ossi is clearly angered, and in a big mess. She shows her father a newspaper that says the Shoe cream king's daughter has married to a count. This is what...