Wikipedia:Today's featured article/requests/Greed (film)

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Greed (film)[edit]

This is the archived discussion of the TFAR nomination for the article below. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as Wikipedia talk:Today's featured article/requests). Please do not modify this page.

The result was: scheduled for Wikipedia:Today's featured article/December 4, 2014 by BencherliteTalk 09:54, 25 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Greed's characters fight over $5,000 in gold.

Greed is a 1924 American silent film, written and directed by Erich von Stroheim and based on Frank Norris's naturalist novel McTeague. The film depicts a trio of protagonists who succumb to their darker nature over a mutual desire for a lottery prize of $5,000 in gold. Von Stroheim shot more than 85 hours of footage and obsessed over accuracy during production. Two months were spent shooting in Death Valley for the film's final sequence and many of the cast and crew became ill. Greed was one of the few films of its time to be shot entirely on location. Von Stroheim used sophisticated techniques such as deep-focus cinematography and montage editing. Originally almost eight hours long, Greed was edited against von Stroheim's wishes to about two-and-a-half hours by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio heads Irving Thalberg and Louis B. Mayer. The conflict between Thalberg and von Stroheim over artistic control of films was a pivotal event in Hollywood history. The cut footage is lost and the original version of the film is considered the "holy grail" for film archivists and historians. Numerous false claims of the original version's discovery have been made over the years and in 1999 a reconstructed version was released using surviving stills from the lost footage. (Full article...)