dcwillis9 wrote:
Fascinating thread.  But it makes me miss Tim Murphy all over again. 

To all the titles listed above, I'd add:
1929:  Unmasked.  The Witching Eyes.  (Dave Sindelar recently turned up a copy of Strange Cargo.)
1930:  The Furies.  The Green Ghost.  In the Next Room.  A Royal Romance.  Le Spectre Vert.  Temple Tower.
1931:  A Dangerous Affair (saw a few reels at the Library of Congress when I was there some 20 years ago). 
1933:  The Horror.
1934:  Drums o'Voodoo.
1935:  Obeah (think there was a thead re this in the last year or so).
1937:  Wajan (which thread also touched on this). 
1944:  Strangers in the Night (Everson brought this to the PFA in Berkeley in the '80s).
1946:  The Haunted Mine.  Invisible Informer (these latter two are probably around, just haven't turned up for me).  Voodoo Devil Drums.smiley: tongue

                                                 "The peasants are aroused!"


The good news: DRUMS O' VOODOO exists.  I saw it on gray market DVD a few years ago.  The acting is on the level of bad community theatre.  There has also been some talk that a condensed version of THE HORROR (entitled JOHN THE DRUNKARD) has been preserved by the LC.

You can delete THE FURIES from that list.  It's not genre (a domestic drama).  

THE GREEN GHOST is the pre-production title for LE SPECTRE VERT, which was the French-language version of THE UNHOLY NIGHT.

The existence of WITCHING EYES is something of a mystery.  I have always suspected that the director, one Ernest Stern, is actually the German art director Ernst Stern.  If so, the film could be German.

George Eastman House used to have WAJAN listed in their holdings, but no longer.  I assume the print had decomposed and been withdrawn.

I sorta-kinda have a vague memory of having heard that a few reels of TEMPLE TOWER might exist in an archive.  Don't quote me on that.