Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 28 11:20 am)
The idea of this garb harkens back to the silent era, and especially the German Directors who came to Hollywood during the 1920's and 30's. If you replace the sunglasses with a monicle, you have Fritz Lang, the director of "Metropolis." Cecil B. DeMille also adopted this mode of dress.
The purpose of the boots and desert garb was for field work, when the crew was out in the sand and heat.
The megaphone was the best that could be done to amplify his voice so the cast and crew could hear spread out as they sometimes were.
Interesting, thank you.
Attached Link: http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-7_M9CACoh8E/TlbCc-NlWYI/AAAAAAAAB3s/UpMOwUoe8K0/s320/Cecil-Demille.jpg
Oh here's a better one :)Yeah, I think it's simply what a well-dressed figure in a position of authority would wear in the outdoors at that time. The riding boots were probably the gentleman's only alternative to town shoes - he wouldn't be seen dead in rough work boots. Once you're wearing riding boots, the jodhpurs are the most comfortable way to go, and khaki is a particularly good colour for spotting ticks on your clothing.
European plantation owners in the colonies would all have been wearing much the same getup, with a riding crop for pointing at minions. Maybe a famous French director started the beret thing.
Phil, while you're on a roll, did robbers ever really wear striped teeshirts and little black Zorro masks?
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Enquiring minds need to know :)