Chico Silent Film Festival Saturday & Sunday, March 14-15

Story of Notorious California Outlaws Featured in Silent Film Made 100 Years Ago in Chico, Oroville & Butte Creek Canyon ...
 Dear Lovers of Local History,

A story has come to my attention that really must be shared ... particularly since it happened 100 years ago and involved the making of what is thought to be the first "moving picture" ever filmed in Butte County. 

In 1914, a motion picture company came to Chico and Oroville to film a six-reel melodrama called "The Folly of a Life of Crime" - this according to local historian John Rudderow. He became intrigued when he read two stories in the Chico Enterprise-Record's "100 Years Ago" column dated July 20, 1914: Movie Outfit Leaves for the Mountains and  Aug. 12, 1914: Wild Shooting on the Streets of Chico Friday.  

Rudderow began sleuthing and found many local c lippings in the Butte County Library about the movie which depicted the real-life story of the notorious Sontag and Evans Gang who reportedly robbed trains rather successfully. The story was widely known at the time and went something like this according to "A Guide to Silent Westerns" ...

George Sontag was the first of the Sontag Evans gang to be captured. John Sontag and Chris Evans continued their wave of robberies until, during one of their several visits home, their careers ended abruptly. Chris was captured after losing one eye to a bullet and John was killed by a hail of bullets. Later, Evans tried to stop the film form being produced, but failed. George Sontag went on a lecture tour recounting his experiences as an outlaw, and Ed Morrell, another member of the gang recently released from San Quentin, toured with Sontag's film.

Headlines from 1914 and 1915 newspapers in Chico and Oroville tell the tale of an ex-bandit turned movie producer turned "bandit" again: 

Bandit Head of 'Movie' Firm: George Sontag Forms $50,000 Concern to Exploit Robber Band

Makes Plans for Movie Acting: George Sontag Completes Negotiations for Use of Hammon Lands

Ammunition for Massacre Received by U.S. Film Co.

Get Out Shaker Bonnets and Hoop Skirts for Picture

Film Troupe Moves to Oroville: Tract of Land for Studio Donated by Lawrence Gardella 

Chris Evans Enters protest

Taking the Last Pictures at Folsom

Film Company Places More Stock on Market

George Sontag Has Been Deposed as President and H.C. Chesbro Elected

U.S. Film Company's Show Receipts Attached: Thomas Brothers Sue to Recover Salary and Commissions

Film Co's. Troubles Again Before Public

George Duke and George Sontag are Indicted by Butte County Grand Jury

It appears old habits are hard to break. The U.S. Film Company's proprietor's were charged with having obtained money under false pretenses and conspiring to obtain money under false pretenses. 

Although the movie was made and it was shown regionally and perhaps on the West Coast (even rumored to have been shown to enthusiastic audiences in South America), it seemed the "The Folly of a Life of Crime" was to be plagued by legal troubles. It was later named "A Pardoned Lifer (1915) with Director Sidney Drew.

A February 20, 1960 KHSL transcript of an interview with two of the film's stars (no actual actors were used in the film) local Chico residents William R. Stead (77 years old at the time of the interview); and "Hank" Pickett (73 years old then) was uncovered by Rudderow. According to the transcript of " Chico State Presents ... There is a Telling with Hector Lee" bloodhounds from Tennessee were brought in to track the outlaws in the movie, which took three months to make - starting in July 1914. 

Portions of the silent movie were said to have been filmed two miles below the town of Centerville in the canyon as well as in Chico at 6th and Flume streets, down along Lindo Channel and various parts of Chico and Oroville and the surrounding hills - all meant to resemble Visalia where the REAL story occurred. There were also shots along the Feather River and a " ... goodly number of Oroville and Chico people are shown in the film" according to one clipping. 

No copies of this film are known to exist. If we ever find one, however, you can bet we'll show it at the Chico Silent Film Festival.

Writing for all of us at Friends of the Arts ... this one's for you, Maria!
530-228-2860
Chico Bike Shop Owner Shares Dad's WINGS-Era Photographs

Won "Best Picture" 90 Years ago. It was the first Academy Award recipient.
Steve O'Bryan, owner of   Pullin's Cyclery in downtown Chico shared some of his father's amazing photographs from when he was a young sailor. Donald B. O'Bryan was stationed in Southern California when WINGS: AN EPIC OF THE AIR (1927) was filmed. 

"My Dad served in the Navy from 1928 until 1958," O'Bryan said. "His Mom signed a paper to allow him in before he was 18 as he had a slow heart rate and his mom figured he wouldn't pass the physical but my Dad retired as a full Lieutenant known in the Navy as a "Mustang" - a seaman that rose through the ranks to be an officer!"

Donald had some incredible photographs. Check them out. He even had one of star Clara Bow!





In This Issue
4th Annual Chico Silent Film Festival Schedule

FOA Upstate logo

Saturday, March 14

 

12:00 p.m.
PETER PAN (1924)

Preceded by cartoon, FUTURITZKY with Felix the Cat (1927)


3:00 p.m.
HAROLD LLOYD, THE THIRD GENIUS OF SILENT COMEDY

 

NEVER WEAKEN (1921, approx. 25")

 

THE FRESHMAN (1925, approx 77") 

 

6:00 p.m. 

THE MARK OF ZORRO (1920)
featuring Douglas Fairbanks

8:00 p.m.
SHOW PEOPLE (1928)   
with MARION DAVIES and WILLIAM HAINES

Sunday, March 15

12:00 p.m.
THE PARSON'S WIDOW
(Sweden, 1920, by 
Carl Th. Dreyer)

VOICE OF THE NIGHTINGALE 
(France, 1923, by 
L. Starewicz)

 

2:00 p.m.

FILMS OF 1915

REGENERATION 

(Raoul Walsh)


THE CHEAT 
(Cecil B. De Mille)

4:30 p.m.              

STEAMBOAT BILL JR. (1928) with Buster Keaton


 

ANGORA LOVE (1929)  featuring Laurel & Hardy


 

7:30 p.m.

WINGS: 
AN EPIC OF THE AIR (1927)
Directed by William A. Wellman, with Richard Arlen, "Buddy" Rogers, Clara Bow.
Frederick Hodges will play the original 1927 score by J. S. Zamecnik 


Read More
Cost details:
  • $10 - per film block
  • $2 - children 12 & under
  • $25 - all festival 
  • pass 
  • FREE for children 5 & under
Location: 

Chico Women's Club
592 E. Third St.


 


 

Our Sponsors




NEA Logo
Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. Logo

Coming Soon ... 



The Nor-Cal Jazz Festival is a regional event  being held in Redding  and Chico. New this year is an event at the Chico Women's Club on March 22, at Laxson Auditorium on the CSU Chico campus on April 11 and a FREE Community Concert in the downtown Chico City Plaza on April 17.  On  April 18 the Festival moves to downtown Redding at the historic Old City Hall and back to Chico at the fabulous Sierra Nevada Big Room on the 19th. This is a regional approach to promoting 'America's Music' - Jazz.