"This was the first screen adaptation of the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle story of prehistoric creatures still alive on a remote Amazon plateau. An expedition is lead (sic) by Professor Challenger and consists of a newspaper reporter, a big-game hunter, and his servant as well as the daughter of the plateau's discoverer, who is still stranded in this uncharted land. After a long journey, the group finds the prehistoric land and encounters all kinds of remarkable plants, dinosaurs, and ape-like men," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis.
Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World" makes its impressive movie debut; the creatures, characters, and situations continue to be imitated, with no end in sight. Oddly enough, this silent version is a case where the original is not the greatest. Herein, the creatures and humans are not scripted, directed, or edited to full advantage; at times, it seems as if the characters are watching a dinosaur movie. More interaction between dinosaur and human was difficult, but possible; a similar lack of contact between apeman and human is inexplicable.
The possibilities lost in this outing would be found, to the extreme, in "King Kong" (1933); a film which makes excellent use of Willis O'Brien's extraordinary stop motion animation effects. That film certainly takes fuller advantage of human/animal interaction.
"The Lost World" adds Bessie Love (as Paula White), to up the expedition's romance level. Ms. Love's character wasn't even in the original novel; so, it's an understandably weak addition. However, she helps adventurer Lewis Stone (as John Roxton) give the film's best performance; as his longing for Love is just about the only interesting "non-creature" element. Wallace Beery (as Professor Challenger) and Lloyd Hughes (as Edward Malone) are good, as the film's other leading players.
Unfortunately, the film includes not only explicit, but also implicit racially insensitive and inaccurate images.
******* The Lost World (2/2/25) Harry O. Hoyt ~ Wallace Beery, Lewis Stone, Lloyd Hughes