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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 79 -- July 1999 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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Contemporary Reviews of Films Directed by William Desmond Taylor, Part III
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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Contemporary Reviews of Films Directed by William Desmond Taylor, Part II
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The following is another sampling of contemporary reviews of Taylor's
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films, spanning his career as film director. Some of the reviews have been
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edited to remove lengthy plot summaries, cast listings, etc. More reviews
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can be found in TAYLOROLOGY 24 and 78.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Up the Road with Sallie
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April 20, 1918
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EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
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"Up the Road with Sallie" is a bright, breezy comedy exactly suited in
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every particular to the talents of winsome, pretty Constance Talmadge, and
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rejoices in the presentation of unique situations, each following hard upon
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the heels of the former, and each adding to the fun and mystery which make
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the plot a wonderfully complicated thing, preserving its interest to the last
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reel. The comedy that can keep the suspense quality in evidence from
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beginning to end, is always a screen winner, and here is one of the few which
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succeeds in so doing...Miss Talmadge has probably excelled all her previous
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screen successes in her portrayal of the madcap Sallie, who coaxes her staid
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aunt into the outer world of adventure. Daintily alluring, whether clad in
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the oilskin automobile costume warranted to defy rough weather, or in
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tailored gown or robe de nuit, her graceful figure and personal charm is
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exhibited to the best advantage. But it is the snap and energy she puts into
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her work that is principally responsible for the play's success...The
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photography furnishes a succession of beautiful views of winding highways and
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rustic surroundings. A number of deep sets and artistic lighting add much to
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the feature's appeal, and the closeups are perfectly posed and filmed. The
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picture as a whole is a distinct triumph for the Select studios.
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April 27, 1918
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Nothing but a guilty conscience or a bad case of indigestion will
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prevent anyone from enjoying the trip "Up the Road with Sallie." This five-
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part Select picture was adapted by Julia Crawford Ivers from the novel by
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Francis Sterrett, and was directed by William D. Taylor. It belongs to the
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list of never-did-happen stories, but that doesn't detract from its amusing
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qualities. It is all breezy, good fun, thanks to the vivacity and youthful
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charm of the star and the clever way in which the story has been put
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together. Constance Talmadge is seen at her best as Sallie Waters, and there
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is an air of wholesomeness about the entire picture that gives it a most
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agreeable atmosphere...One situation is a bit risque, but Constance Talmadge
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carries it off daintily and without the slightest trace of offense.
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Personality is a great asset on the screen...
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April 27, 1918
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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"Up the Road with Sallie," adapted by Julia Crawford Ivers from a novel
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by Francis Sterrett and featuring that ravishing comedienne, Constance
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Talmadge, makes a farce comedy, the sum and light fluffy substance of which
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is excellent. Its complications contain an abundant supply of humor and the
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author has shown a keen knowledge of human nature in his four principal
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characterizations that makes them beings of flesh and blood instead of rather
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impossible puppets; often the incumberances of a farce. The romance of
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Sallie and Cabot is fetching and pretty but the various love passages between
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Aunt Martha and Henderson with their petty jealousies and awkward
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protestations of affection are a rare combination of the human and the
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humorous. This mixture, not the least of the picture's many merits and which
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is apparent throughout the story, brings "Up the Road with Sallie" to the top-
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notch of picture comedy. The plot center around the various misconceptions
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of the four principals. Sallie and her Aunt Martha motoring in search of
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adventure take refuge in an empty but warmly furnished house during a rain
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storm. Other guests desiring shelter are Cabot and Henderson and
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circumstances and fragments of conversation supplemented by vivid
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imaginations result in each pair believing the other robbers. The rain goes
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on for four days and the romances start. An admirable supply of appropriate
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subtitles and funny twists galore keep the flow of comedy steady during this
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long episode, the main one of the picture. It has been treated expertly both
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by adaptor and Director William D. Taylor. Mr. Taylor, whose forte seems to
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lie in the production of the comedy picture has carefully restrained his
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subject from stepping on the offensive side of the line. Even when Sallie
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discovers she has climbed back into the wrong bed and that Cabot is also
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wound up in the covers, the effect is genuinely funny and so realistic is the
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surprise expressed by each of them that response to it will be multiplied.
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The rainstorm is excellent and the photographic effects achieved by Frank E.
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Garbutt are to be commended...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Mile-A-Minute Kendall
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May 11, 1918
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EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
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There is plenty of snap and dash in this bright comedy-drama which
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abounds in amusing situations and runs from start to finish without a break
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in the continuity. Also a pretty vein of sentiment is in evidence which
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balances the humorous phases of the play nicely, and taken on the whole it
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can be listed as an extremely desirable attraction. Jack Pickford gives an
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energetic and pleasing performance in the role of the impetuous young
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spendthrift--Jack Kendall--and Louise Huff's grace and beauty are strikingly
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manifested in her portrayal of the faithful Joan, to whose love and gentle
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influence the madcap hero owes his final success and reformation...The
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photography includes many handsome interiors, the scene of the banquet given
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by young Kendall to his chorus girl friends being especially ornate in its
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settings, and the country views present remarkably well filmed specimens of
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rustic scenery. There are a number of excellently posed close-ups and the
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lighting effects could not be improved upon.
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May 18, 1918
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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The prodigal son of Owen Davis' play, "Mile-a-Minute Kendall," provides
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another human comedy role for Jack Pickford. He is a realistic and likable
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prodigal. The part is in itself natural in conception and treatment and
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Mr. Pickford's handling of it is a skilled piece of acting from first to
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last. Even while seen as the thoughtless waster of his father's fortune, he
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is pleasing. He is thoroughly human when he imagines himself in love with
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the alluring Rosalynde d'Aubre of Lottie Pickford, and genuine to the last
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when success comes to him because of the love of Louise Huff's appealing
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Joan..."Mile-a-Minute Kendall" is the faithful picture of the rich, young and
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citified man of today. In mirroring this slice of life it is possessed of as
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much color and appeal as are the Tom Sawyer productions in which Mr. Pickford
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has appeared. Its space is about equally divided between human interest and
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comedy touches, a combination which always pleases. Gardner Hunting adapted
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and William D. Taylor directed. This team seems sure-fire.
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May 18, 1918
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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..."Mile-a-Minute Kendall" has none of the keen observation of life that
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made Booth Tarkington's "Seventeen" so satisfactory. Its fun is innocent,
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however, and the soiled dove lady is not at all dreadful. The production is
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never slighted. Louise Huff as Joan Evans and Lottie Pickford as Rosalynde
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could hardly be improved. Two of the parts are not well played. Jane Wolff
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is too tearful and depressed as Mrs. Kendall, and Jack McDonald burlesques
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the character of the country landlord to a painful degree.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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How Could You, Jean?
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June 29, 1918
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EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
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Mary Pickford--That's All! A Marvel of youthful grace and heroine of a
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delightfully nonsensical comedy replete with light touches of sentiment,
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alive with wit, and a sure money winner wherever flashed upon the screen.
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As regards the plot, why there isn't any worth speaking of, and really none
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is needed. Because, after one has watched little Mary flitting to and fro,
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whether accompanied by cows, pigs, geese or their human equivalent--the only
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verdict is that the curly-haired little darling of filmland still reigns
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supreme upon her celluloid throne. The winsome leading lady is herself all
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through the picture. 'Nuff said! Because the chief charm of the film lies
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in the wonderful acting of Miss Pickford, as shown in the play of her
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expressive feature, the sly glances, the alluring wink, the shadowy change
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from grave to gay mood which in an instant works a lightning metamorphosis in
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a situation. This is not to say that the story is utterly devoid of purpose.
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It carries no complications that would burden the brain of an infant with
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unnecessary striving, but, nevertheless, adult as well as juvenile movie
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patrons are sure to yield to its lure...The little star fits her present
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vehicle like the proverbial glove and is well supported by a very competent
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cast...The photography includes a number of exceedingly beautiful rustic
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scenes, artistically tinted views of meadow, forest and stream, and cleverly
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executed long shots.
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June 29, 1918
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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Mary Pickford's "Stella Maris" showed her at her acting best. And there
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have been many others that earned her nothing but praise. Generally
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speaking, her pictures have steadily increased in merit and while her public
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seems certainly glad to see her in such productions as "Amarilly of
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Clothesline Alley," which is typical of the majority she has appeared in, and
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does not demand more like the Locke picturization, it seems reasonably
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certain that it will be dissatisfied with "How Could You, Jean?" In general
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getup this, her latest offering, resembles an elongated Mack Sennett farce,
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handled by a director acquainted with the mechanics and gags of knockabout
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comedy and tempering his scenes by beautiful backgrounds, camera work of the
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rarest kind, and a certain show of artistry in the more pensive moments of
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the picture...Certainly we never expected to see the dainty Mary attacked
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from the rear by a rushing ram and propelled over a cow pasture like a shot.
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This will register as a laugh, no doubt, but to our mind it immediately
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suggested Ben Turpin and Chester Conklin. Miss Pickford is a clever
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comedienne and needs not the indignified assistance of a battering ram...We
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do not mean to imply that "How Could You, Jean?" is by any means a dreary or
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boresome affair. When Jean, the aristocrat, enters the kitchen as cook,
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becomes acquainted with in awkward Swedish farm hand, is teased by the
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kiddies from next door and when she discovers herself falling in love with
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Ted, whom she believes of the same ilk as the Swede, there are chances for
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comedy of the tried and true Pickford type. Miss Marion's subtitles also
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assist the picture in no small measure. But after all something possessed
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with a slight trace of drama, something a little more polite is expected when
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we see Miss Pickford's name on the screen. And it is expected because she
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has given us something dramatic and politely comical in the past...
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June 29, 1918
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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...The construction of the story could be vastly improved, but the
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spirit is good clean fun and the production reveals country scenes of quiet
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beauty that are refreshing to the soul. Mary Pickford's arch wink, radiant
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smile and deft comic methods are given full play in the character of Jean...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Johanna Enlists
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September 14, 1918
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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That there is no necessity for sombre mood in stories of present-day
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military atmosphere is delightfully illustrated in "Johanna Enlists," and she
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actually does enlist as Mary Pickford in the American Artillery regiment
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which gave her support in the play. The regimental action and encampment
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near the house of Johanna of the story is real and is cleverly incorporated
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in the movement of the play at every stage of its developments. This
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realism, some humorous sub-titles and Miss Pickford's artistic interpretation
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constitute the main values, but they are winning enough to please almost any
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American audience. The story is a very frail fabric...Most of the sub-titles
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are bright and humorous, but those which get outside of the action into
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narrative could be eliminated without serious loss to story interest.
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"Johanna Enlists" should please every Pickford audience, and many more
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besides.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Captain Kidd, Jr.
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June 1919
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PHOTO-PLAY WORLD
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The charming personality of Mary Pickford is given full scope for a
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display of itself in this new little play, which was written from the stage
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piece by Rida Johnson Young. While Miss Pickford may have done bigger
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pictures, she has done few more engaging ones, for the humor and the pathos
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and the love element are very cleverly distributed, and the scenes are
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managed with a view to making the most of the slight dramatic attributes and
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the rather more pronounced comedy phases...
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May 3, 1919
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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"Captain Kidd, Jr.," may be summed up as a lightweight drama and
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paperweight comedy, which fact makes it hardly substantial enough for feature
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length. That the piece holds together remarkably well is sufficient evidence
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that it has been entrusted to skillful hands. What it lacks in dramatic
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substance is counterbalanced by the spontaneity of the action, the humanness
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of the characterizations, the artistic quality of the production, and above
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all, the measure of admirable acting turned in by the star and her players.
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The offering is a reminder of some of Mary Pickford's first pictures in that
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it exacts no demands on her personality other than to appear bewitchingly
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feminine, nor does it tax the imagination of the spectator. All one has to
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sit back in his seat and watch the players nurse the anaemic thing along and
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give it a breath of life...A bit of the action is grossly exaggerated,
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particularly in the representation of small town life. One rube character,
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the "constabule," nearly spoils the story in his ridiculousness and almost
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makes us think that he might have been loaned by Mack Sennett. Otherwise
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everything is in its favor. The picture may be brittle, but its thin
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properties are mildly amusing...
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May 3, 1919
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Let no possible laugh escape, was the rule governing the making of
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"Captain Kidd, Jr.," the latest Artcraft picture with Mary Pickford as the
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magnet...Opening in the second-hand book store of a quaint old Scotchman
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whose granddaughter is the guiding spirit of the place, the first third of
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the picture is human, brisk of action and sufficiently novel of situation to
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entertain all classes of Pickford fans. With the shifting of the locale to a
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small town in New England a greater change takes place in the classification
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of the characters and the humorous nature of the picture. Keystone comedy of
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the get-the-laugh-at-any-price sort supplies the fun from then on, a
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burlesque constable of the broadest type and the longest, thinnest legs being
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the chief comic cutup...Some spectators will vote the constable a huge
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success, others will find him too much in evidence, while still other devoted
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admirers of the star will wish he had been left out completely...Victor Potel
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as the comic supplement constable is always true to type and will be heartily
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relished by those who are willing to laugh and ask no questions. The
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production is up to standard.
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Anne of Green Gables
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November 22, 1919
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EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
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Somebody described Mary Miles Minter as "a ray of sunshine shot with
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sapphire," which seems a pretty and fitting way of putting it. At any rate
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Miss Minter is a beaming, radiant "eyeful" of youthful charm, and "Anne of
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Green Gables," her newest photoplay, a Realart offering, is by all means an
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attractive setting. For sentiment "Anne of Green Gables" has something
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almost as pretty as the heroine of the proceedings. There is little beside
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sentiment in the play and at times it becomes a bit sticky and perhaps the
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story receives a somewhat attenuated telling, but for all around purposes
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this offering is splendid in design and execution. It should be hailed as a
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bit of fresh and charming entertainment and serve as pleasant relief from the
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tense tone and mood of the highly melodramatic feature pictures of the
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current market. Miss Minter is, of course, the whole show. The beginning,
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middle and end of "Anne of Green Gables" depends upon her for whatever appeal
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there is contained in the play...
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November 22, 1919
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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...The whole story is sweet and wholesome--even Anne's adventure with
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the striped "pussy"--and the different stages of her development from
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pigtails and knee dresses to young womanhood are followed with every
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attention to beauty and truthfulness of background and the genuine New
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England atmosphere called for by the story. William D. Taylor, the director,
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chose a wonderful old place for the home where Anne finds love and happiness,
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and many of the locations are rare examples of rural landscape effects...
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A simple, clean story which is just what it claims to be, the merit of "Anne
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of Green Gables" is the fidelity with which it brings out the better side of
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humanity and enables its lovable heroine to enlarge greatly her circle of
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great admirers. Mary Miles Minter has the youth and personal charm required
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for the part of Anne, and responds quickly and convincingly to the
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character's varying moods...
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November 29, 1919
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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There are some very good characterizations in this picture and it is
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this array of excellent types that registered best with the reviewer. The
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continuity, the mountings, and the photography are all up to present day
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standards but after an auspicious opening the director evidently believed he
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should inject the so-called "punch" in the action and possibly "forced" his
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performers to "act" and thus destroyed some of the naturalness of the later
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scenes. To those who like the "Anne" series of stories by L. M. Montgomery,
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and their names must be legion as these stories enjoyed a wide vogue, this
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picture should suitably entertain. It is a simple theme and will undoubtedly
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afford the keenest enjoyment to those who like the sort of entertainment
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provided by Chautauquas and Lyceum courses. For a blase and confirmed
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picture fan this picture will not register so heavily, although it should
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satisfy all classes. But its strongest appeal will be in the smaller towns
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and the neighborhood houses in a nice community...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Huckleberry Finn
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February 28, 1920
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NEW YORK DRAMATIC MIRROR
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It is a glad day indeed when we can renew our old chumminess with Huck
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Finn and Tom Sawyer, kings of adventure, explorers, pirates, and adepts in
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all the arts of boyhood. To be sure this is not the screen debut of either
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of the young heroes of the Mississippi Valley, but there is more of the
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spirit of the genial Mark Twain and more of the breathlessness of high
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romance in this particular narrative of their careers than in either of their
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preceding film ventures...To William D. Taylor must be given unreserved
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praise for the way he has caught and transferred to the screen the mood of
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the original story. The Mississippi country itself, or something very much
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like it, furnishes a background that is both authentic and picturesque, and
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through the whole play Mark Twain lives and breathes again...It is with real
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joy, then, that one is able to proclaim that the film versions of these
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cherished stories are worthy to take their places beside their printed
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originals...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Judy of Rogues' Harbor
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March 6, 1920
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NEW YORK DRAMATIC MIRROR
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Despite the hard work that Mary Miles Minter does in "Judy of Rogues'
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Harbor,' this hectic melodrama fails to convince, as was shown at the Rialto
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by the snickering of the audience that was heard in absurd situations. There
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is too much display of brutality that does not suit the personality of Miss
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Minter. However, a notable cast helps to create a little interest in the
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weird conglomeration of incidents that are brought forth on the screen...It
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is hard to believe that William D. Taylor is responsible for the direction.
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Most of the time it is merely bad and never does it rise above mediocrity.
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The story recalls the early days of the motion picture when nothing was
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supposed to be logical or interesting so long as it was a picture that moved.
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Nowadays, however, heavier demands are made on photoplays.
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February 14, 1920
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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Imagination has not been a governing factor in Mary Miles Minter's
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latest production, "Judy of Rogues' Harbor." Having not read Grace Miller
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White's book, from which the adaptation is made, we are not in a position to
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state how closely it follows the original, but it looks to us that either the
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author has been unduly theatrical or else the director has not used his
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imagination. The picture takes a long time in getting started, due
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principally to establishing a wealth of characters. And they are brought
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forward in four different sequences. Mr. Taylor has wasted an enormous
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amount of good and inoffensive film by having his players go through scene
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after scene to establish relations and conditions that could have been shown
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in a few episodes with a few well chosen subtitles. And speaking of
|
|
subtitles, many of these are crude and bewildering, with the result that the
|
|
action is often hindered. There is too much concentrated effort expended in
|
|
showing every little incident in the relations of the characters. The
|
|
picture is hectic melodrama with a vengeance and it capitalizes as its
|
|
dominant idea the theme of happiness. Yet its thought is completely
|
|
subordinated by a prominent display of brutality and lust. There is no
|
|
central character in the accepted sense since the other figures seem quite as
|
|
important as Judy. The plot becomes involved so that every melodramatic
|
|
ingredient is utilized. And when the story is finished one cannot say that
|
|
truth is a vital factor. Weird touches are discernible throughout the
|
|
action. Coincidences and conveniences are worked overtime. One can ask a
|
|
deal of perplexing questions concerning the development of the picture. Miss
|
|
Minter succeeds in making herself appealing in the title role, but hectic
|
|
melodrama is not her forte. Theodore Roberts stands out in a character
|
|
study.
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February 14, 1920
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Admirers of the stories written by Grace Miller White will be delighted
|
|
with the screen production of "Judy of Rogues' Harbor," made by Realart with
|
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Mary Miles Minter as the persecuted heroine. Like "Tess of the Storm
|
|
Country" it is filled with melodramatic happenings, the good folk being very,
|
|
very good and the bad folk very, very bad...There are two features of the
|
|
production that will satisfy the most ardent lover of the beautiful: certain
|
|
of the exterior long shorts, and several of the close-ups of Mary Miles
|
|
Minter. In the language of the circus poster: These features alone are worth
|
|
the price of admission. The character of Judy is well within the star's best
|
|
line of endeavor and she brings to it the youthful charm so essential to its
|
|
success...William Desmond Taylor has shown good judgment in his selection of
|
|
local color. The scenario is rather overcrowded with incident owing to the
|
|
necessity of compressing the novel into six reels, but there is heart
|
|
interest in every foot of the six reels.
|
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Nurse Marjorie
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April 3, 1920
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Realart has chosen an English story in this one for Mary Miles Minter.
|
|
Whether it will amuse an American audience with its "lord and lady, duke and
|
|
duchess," atmosphere remains to be seen. But we will say this for it and for
|
|
the benefit of those who do not understand these well written English
|
|
classical stories, it is one of the best of its kind ever produced, being
|
|
written by Israel Zangwill, a skilled portrayer of English life. There's one
|
|
great fault with pictures of this kind, however, and it is the same in stage
|
|
productions, they're liable to be a bit slow and draggy, caused no doubt on
|
|
account of the characters, whose life and surroundings are give more to
|
|
quietness and dignity than to activity. Still, we have seen American
|
|
audiences, especially of the elite class, sit through and enjoy pictures of
|
|
this type profoundly. This feature offsets the monotony by the introduction
|
|
of two characters whose love affair adds plenty of action and interest to the
|
|
production. The picture might be a little draggy in the hospital scenes but
|
|
makes up for this in the many comedy situations introduced between the lovers
|
|
and again in the last two reels between the hero and Marjorie's supposed
|
|
mother, who does not hesitate to smoke a pipe and offer another to the
|
|
dejected lover. All told it is a classical story, well written, with a
|
|
pretty star, who plays her part well and a supporting cast which could not
|
|
have been selected with better judgment. It should interest, especially
|
|
among the elite.
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|
|
April 3, 1920
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The clean, wholesome quality of the Realart production, "Nurse
|
|
Marjorie," cannot be denied. Its star, Mary Miles Minter, as pretty as ever,
|
|
is still the prey of a desire on the part of both director and scenaroist to
|
|
play up her winning personality without sufficient concern for the dramatic
|
|
values of the story The picture has a good opening, presenting an amusing
|
|
group of English and Irish types, whose relationship provides a comic
|
|
situation. Miss Minter's work is attractive by force of her beauty and
|
|
youth, but she still adheres to mannerisms which are not a mark of
|
|
professional proficiency. The picture is much at fault in construction, and
|
|
is padded with unimportant details, which detract from the strength of the
|
|
production. The scenes in the fish emporium are worked hard for comedy
|
|
effects, some of which get over individually. Whether or not it is in
|
|
accordance with Israel Zangwill's intention the matching of a member of the
|
|
House of Commons with the supposed daughter of a fish dealer, as presented in
|
|
the unsavory fish kitchen of the picture, fails to be convincing. The scenes
|
|
in the lame boy's room in the nurse's home, are sure to please, and Frankie
|
|
Lee is a clever little actor. On the other hand one grows out of patience
|
|
with superficial attempts at comedy in the room of the "blind man," otherwise
|
|
John Danbury who has had an operation to eliminate a squint. The production
|
|
would be improved by cutting. Lydia Yeamans Titus, Arthur Hoyt and Frank
|
|
Leigh do conspicuously good work.
|
|
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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|
Jenny Be Good
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May 15, 1920
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|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
If this picture were cut to five reels--it now runs six--and some of the
|
|
unnecessary scenes "chopped out," and many of the sub-titles changes so as to
|
|
give more expression to their meaning, Realart would have a pleasing Mary
|
|
Miles Minter feature which should interest and amuse the patrons and bring
|
|
satisfactory results to the box-office. As the production stands, there are
|
|
too many scenes introduced, many of which could easily be eliminated, as they
|
|
are not of vital importance and tend rather to detract than add to the
|
|
interest of the story. And again these scenes are introduced in a way that
|
|
might cause confusion to the average person, for they seem to jump ahead of
|
|
the story and then back to it again, instead of finishing with one sequence
|
|
before going into the other. The star is her usual self in appearance and
|
|
action and the direction is up to standard and shows a carefulness in the
|
|
handling of the star and attention to detail especially in regard to the
|
|
sets, some of which were lavish, and the exteriors, many of which were
|
|
beautiful, that could not be excelled...
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|
|
May 15, 1920
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
If individual scenes from "Jenny Be Good," a Realart production, based
|
|
on a story by Wilbur Fauley, were culled for criticism, there would be found
|
|
many that would live up to an artist's idea of the beautiful. Unfortunately,
|
|
however, the dramatic qualities of the picture are weak; and if the
|
|
production had been made in four reels instead of six, the result would have
|
|
been much better--condensing of the story interest would have added punch to
|
|
the drama, and livened up the interest generally. The dope interest in the
|
|
picture should be eliminated. Mary Miles Minter continues to present a
|
|
pretty picture, and it is not her fault that sickly sentimental sub-titles
|
|
are allowed to mar the seriousness of the drama. Her director is still
|
|
inclined to centralize the star to the general detriment of the picture...
|
|
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|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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|
The Soul of Youth
|
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|
|
August 28, 1920
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The spirit of Oliver Optic and Horatio Alger has fallen upon the author
|
|
of "The Soul of Youth," and the William D. Taylor production is full of the
|
|
simple expedients of these celebrated writers of juvenile fiction. There is
|
|
the same struggle with an adverse fate and the same rise to fame and fortune
|
|
that always marked the path of the earlier heroes. Naturally none of the
|
|
delightful humor and deep understanding of boyhood to be found in the Mark
|
|
Twain stories directed by Mr. Taylor appear in the present story. Its
|
|
incidents are of the kind most easily understood by the youthful mind and are
|
|
cleverly calculated to awaken sympathy for the homeless hero and the half
|
|
starved mongrel that is his closest companion...The picture is practically
|
|
the first recognition of a demand for original juvenile fiction in the
|
|
movies, and its reception by the general public will be watched with a good
|
|
deal of interest by the industry in general. Lewis Sargent vindicates his
|
|
selection as the featured player of the cast. He is natural and human at al
|
|
points of his performance and presents a character at once likable and
|
|
appealing...
|
|
|
|
August 28, 1920
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
...The picture opens with all the tenseness and dramatic action of "The
|
|
Man Who Came Back" and closes with all the boyish realizations of Booth
|
|
Tarkington's "Clarence." The first five-hundred feet or more gives us some
|
|
of the best melodrama seen on the screen for some time. Swinging from the
|
|
scenes of Pete Moran and his "woman" to the orphanage; to the court of Judge
|
|
Ben Lindsey and then to the home of the Hamiltons, where The Boy finds the
|
|
only real home he has ever known, the cameraman has caught some excellent
|
|
drama and placed the youthful Sargent in a way to give a good account of his
|
|
stewardship as a screen luminary...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
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|
|
The Furnace
|
|
|
|
November 20, 1920
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...The story is not essentially original, yet there are some new twists
|
|
and moments of suspense that score heavily. The sub-titles are clever and
|
|
some of them give good food for thought. The settings are good--the wedding
|
|
scene at the church being exceptionally beautiful. The lawn party is very
|
|
pretty, and the wind-storm that arises when the party is at its height is
|
|
very realistic. The carnival scenes in the ballroom are spectacular..."The
|
|
Furnace" is a good dramatic photoplay for people who think, and probably will
|
|
enjoy its greatest success in the highest class houses.
|
|
|
|
December 4, 1920
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Whatever merit the original story contained certainly hasn't been taken
|
|
advantage of in the screen adaptation. There is very little plot material
|
|
present, the idea being based upon a honeymoon quarrel which is such an
|
|
inconsequential matter that it is amazing how it ever appealed to the
|
|
sponsors as picture entertainment. A word or two by the parties involved in
|
|
the quarrel would have brought peace, but for five reels their foolish
|
|
conflict is forced with nothing tangible in the way of logic or argument or
|
|
drama or anything else than a grand spread. William D. Taylor has been given
|
|
a good sized check-book and he has gone the limit in staging the picture.
|
|
He has designed some massive sets and others which are thoroughly in harmony.
|
|
In fact the one redeeming thing about the offering is its production.
|
|
No expense has been spared to make it lavish. If as much money had been
|
|
spent for a good story the result would have been different. The characters
|
|
move about like so many puppets entirely at the whim of the director. Some
|
|
of their actions and arguments have very little sense about them. For
|
|
instance, the wife who walks around in an amazing variety of gowns asks a
|
|
masculine friend to lend her some money. Her husband is rich enough to
|
|
provide her with funds. There is no foundation for many other scenes and
|
|
situations. The figures are moved about from London to Monte Carlo to
|
|
Scotland to Canada and one has difficulty in keeping track of them. They
|
|
flit around from one room to another with equal speed. There is really no
|
|
head nor tail to the thing. Inconsequential as the quarrel between the
|
|
honeymooners is, the development of their "spat" is even more lacking in
|
|
substance. The title is meaningless unless one is led to believe that the
|
|
married couple must be purged of their selfish whims in the crucible. The
|
|
characters extract no sympathy from the spectator. Mr. Taylor has piled on
|
|
the detail and given stress to every little incident. And drama is missing;
|
|
likewise reality and truth. Agnes Ayres doesn't get beneath the surface in
|
|
her characterization, although she commands considerable attention with her
|
|
beauty and distinctive costumes. Theodore Roberts is good as usual in a
|
|
crotchety role. Milton Sills and Jerome Patrick are rather wooden in their
|
|
portrayals--which is not to be wondered at considering the spineless plot.
|
|
There is a good church scene representing the marriage ceremony. It is the
|
|
only true touch in the picture.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
The Witching Hour
|
|
|
|
March 12, 1921
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Probably no stage play of the last twenty years has offered the picture
|
|
producer richer or more spectacular opportunities than Augustus Thomas' "The
|
|
Witching Hour." This drama, one of the first to make use of the latent
|
|
dramatic possibilities in that mysterious fact of hypnotism--a fact which
|
|
still to some remains a theory and is therefore the more fascinating--seems
|
|
to have been molded in the exact form or mold so dear to the scenario writer
|
|
and director. Considering the essentials of the play, its theme, its
|
|
involved but always gripping plot (a plot certainly possessing a murder
|
|
puzzle, the solution of which is beyond the average patron), its dual love
|
|
interest and its powerful melodramatic highlights, it is peculiar that a
|
|
director of the skill of William D. Taylor did not make more of it. What
|
|
strikes us as the most obvious flaw of the production is the too abundant use
|
|
of subtitles. Subtitle writing is an art only as long as the author of the
|
|
printed words seeks to clarify or emphasize the pictured action. When the
|
|
author of the subtitle finds it convenient to supplant the action with
|
|
references to important complementary scenes, the result is a give-away to
|
|
the spectator that the scenario writer or director has not done his business
|
|
in the way of picturing the drama itself. In other words, "The Witching
|
|
Hour" is poorly adapted for the screen. It seems hurried, careless--the
|
|
possibilities of the original have not been grasped--not even suggested. The
|
|
psychology of characterization, the rich and vital action, the tense
|
|
situations and climaxes--these are missing. The picture carries some fine
|
|
lighting and some extravagant settings. These cannot compensate for the lack
|
|
of drama. Elliot Dexter heads a cast composed of many of the most reliable
|
|
members of the Lasky stock company. But even Dexter seems to be wandering a
|
|
bit. Even in the famous dramatic scene, when he tells the villain to drop
|
|
the gun, that he "can't pull the trigger," he seems more inclined to
|
|
emphasize the attractiveness of his own profile than the actual force of the
|
|
situation itself. "The Witching Hour" will attract patronage--that is
|
|
certain what with its various advertising accessories of the production. The
|
|
question whether it will please its large houses is another matter, however.
|
|
The original material is so well known that it seems exceedingly difficult to
|
|
judge the picture on its own merits--the ghosts of the play and the initial
|
|
picture production made from it stalk about and are inclined to mock the
|
|
various scenes and sequences in the present adaptation.
|
|
|
|
March 12, 1921
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Splendor of treatment characterizes this production of "The Witching
|
|
Hour" from the magnificent scene of grand opera at the start through other
|
|
notable ensembles. The director is obviously in sympathy with the mood of
|
|
the play, for it is handled with that quiet and effective realism
|
|
characteristic of the author's finest work for stage performance. Whether or
|
|
not the telepathic and hypnotic premises are sound, there is preserved
|
|
convincing probability of incident and character, and this is strengthened by
|
|
a cast admirably chose...As show at the Rialto Theatre to a large audience,
|
|
"The Witching Hour" held close attention and provided fine entertainment.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Sacred and Profane Love
|
|
|
|
April 30, 1921
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Elsie Ferguson has in "Sacred and Profane Love" an adaptation of her
|
|
stage play which was adapted in turn from Arnold Bennett's novel, "The Book
|
|
of Carlotte." Not being familiar with either the book or the play we cannot
|
|
say whether the screen version is faithful or not. But it never seems to get
|
|
beneath the surface. Somehow the plot and characterization appear
|
|
artificial, which is probably due to the inability of the sponsors to catch
|
|
the psychology of the theme. If one criticizes the title one will be forced
|
|
to criticize the play too, for it does not carry two versions of love, but
|
|
does show the length at which a heroine will go to regenerate a man through
|
|
the call of romance...The scenes are mostly transitional and the action jumps
|
|
around at the convenience of the scenarist and title writer. In fact what
|
|
would be real dramatic situations are glossed over, with the result that no
|
|
deep note is sounded. The heroine is charmed over the pianist's
|
|
interpretations and her love is depicted as profane when she gives herself up
|
|
to him. Such a love is never painted in this fashion by the majority of
|
|
screen writers...The best sequence in the picture is the awakening of love in
|
|
his apartment when they play a duet together. The subsequent episodes
|
|
detailing the triangle note strike an artificial discord, principally because
|
|
of the heavy and wooden performance of Thomas Holding. Some may criticize
|
|
the elaborate furnishings and costumes of the heroine as inconsistent with
|
|
the characterization. It is a picture which seldom moves with vital action.
|
|
It is often wordy and dull. Mr. Taylor has contributed some good individual
|
|
scenes, but these seldom score because there is no motive behind them. Miss
|
|
Ferguson has very few moments to display any emotional talent.
|
|
|
|
April 30, 1921
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...On its artistic side this episode is flawlessly acted and produced.
|
|
There is not one touch of vulgarity about any of the incidents.
|
|
Mr. Bennett's psychology is never at fault. As a truthful picture of well-
|
|
bred profane love it is without a blemish. The heroine of this adventure
|
|
secretly fed her mind upon "Mademoiselle De Maupin" and Darwin's "Origin of
|
|
Species," an injudicious combination, to say the least...Elsie Ferguson is
|
|
easily equal to the part of Carlotta. The complicated emotions of the young
|
|
English girl who learns the difference between sacred and profane love by
|
|
practical experience are portrayed by Miss Ferguson with rare sympathy.
|
|
Conrad Nagel makes the pianist a living personality, and the rest of the cast
|
|
is of good quality. The production is excellent in every detail.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Wealth
|
|
|
|
July 9, 1921
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Cosmo Hamilton has stopped, temporarily, skating on thin ice with his
|
|
screen essays. His latest contribution, "Wealth," has nothing in common with
|
|
the eternal triangle and the trespassing figure of the moral leper. Instead
|
|
he has used an ordinary theme based upon the curse of money and has dressed
|
|
it up with obvious, though fairly interesting dramatic situations. Hamilton
|
|
becomes a trifle tedious in presenting the lesson to be learned from the idea-
|
|
-since his characters and plot and incident are stilted and they are placed
|
|
in well grooved scenes. The picture does serve however, in presenting Ethel
|
|
Clayton, in a role which enables her to express her well grounded talent for
|
|
emotional expression. It is a sympathetic drawing which is offered here--
|
|
that of the poor, struggling artist who marries a wealthy "playboy" and
|
|
discovers that money cannot buy happiness. William D. Taylor has given the
|
|
picture a splendid production, as well as seeing to it that the action
|
|
progresses with very little recourse to dialogue. The discriminating
|
|
spectator will notice, however, that the latter sequences are forced--that
|
|
what takes placed is introduced for dramatic effect rather than for any
|
|
regard for logical climaxes. Particularly is this true when the husband and
|
|
wife are separated for a brief time. The introduction of the baby and the
|
|
subsequent death has no reason to be incorporated except to stress the
|
|
conflict engendered by a dominant mother-in-law. The infant's death is
|
|
certainly not pleasant and will invite criticism from feminine patrons...The
|
|
director has failed to touch upon the human touches which are noticeable in
|
|
an elusive way. An instance is given when the young father fails to look in
|
|
on his child before his departure. There is very little intimate incident--
|
|
the director following the author's idea to stress the conflict and the
|
|
lesson. It is not a picture which will live in the memory, it being simply
|
|
an average program release.
|
|
|
|
July 9, 1921
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...At times the tale is irritating rather than entertaining..."Wealth"
|
|
is a smart but superficial analysis of American life. The acting and the
|
|
production go a long way toward rendering the theme and its deductions
|
|
acceptable...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Beyond
|
|
|
|
September 17, 1921
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
"Beyond" is a very eccentric series of episodic scenes in which
|
|
spiritualistic propaganda and a temperance lecture are added to a feminine
|
|
"Enoch Arden" in a way that can scarcely fail to appear ludicrous to the
|
|
average fan. The authorship of this weird concoction is laid at the door of
|
|
one of England's greatest playwrights, Henry Arthur Jones, a man famous for
|
|
his skill at dramatic construction and his ability to write plays in which
|
|
wholesome lessons are presented entertainingly. Either Mr. Jones has little
|
|
respect for the intelligence of picture audiences or he has absorbed too much
|
|
English spiritualism. At any rate the material he has provided for "Beyond"
|
|
is neither skillfully constructed, convincing in plot or well written in
|
|
titles, although some of the latter are unmistakably original and not the
|
|
work of staff writers...Ethel Clayton and a capable cast appear in
|
|
innumerable scenes which require titles to explain what is going on and which
|
|
never show any continuous action or interesting incident. The "ghost" of
|
|
Ethel's mother shows up ever so often to explain that everything will come
|
|
out all right, but she never tells her anything that will aid in bringing
|
|
this about. All in all it is a very unsatisfactory picture unless one is
|
|
uncharitable enough to view it as a comedy and about the only place it may be
|
|
expected to go over is at a spiritualistic camp meeting, for unlike
|
|
"Earthbound" it has no theme worthy of respect nor technical construction
|
|
unusual enough to command interest.
|
|
|
|
September 17, 1921
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...The material for the story is generally interesting but the big
|
|
dramatic points seem to miss fire and the death of the second wife a trick of
|
|
the dramatist's to bring about a happy ending. Through the fault of either
|
|
the director or the actors, the news that Geoffrey Southerne's wife has been
|
|
lost at sea does not drive home as it should, and there is a feeling of
|
|
perfunctoriness about most of the complications...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Morals
|
|
|
|
February 4, 1922
|
|
EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
|
|
Heart interest predominates in this picture, which is beautifully
|
|
photographed, well directed and ably presented by an excellent cast of
|
|
players. Possessing a powerful melodramatic value, the melodramatic
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sentiment is never overdone, its sentiment is clean and wholesome and
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suspense holds sway throughout the whole production. As a stage attraction
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this adaptation of Locke's popular novel made a great hit, and we miss our
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guess completely if the film version doesn't make the patrons of the silent
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screen sit up and take notice. Director Taylor has performed his task with
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admirable judgment, bringing out the strong points of the story exactly where
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they are needed, without making the too frequent mistake of his
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contemporaries of slopping into excess sentimentality. Exhibitors in general
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should find this feature an excellent drawing card. The helplessness of the
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heroine, abandoned to the cold mercies of a great city, makes a powerful bid
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|
for the audience's sympathy, which holds good to the end...The continuity is
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|
unbroken and the action moves rapidly.
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January 7, 1922
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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"Morals" is an especially fine picture from any angle that interests you
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most, but from the standpoint of the exhibitor it can be said that its chief
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|
feature is its real human appeal. It embodies this quality to such a strong
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|
degree that it is no snap judgment nor over emphasis to state unqualifiedly
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|
that "Morals" will meet with success wherever shown. It is the sort of
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picture that meets with general response...The entertainment value of the
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present adaptation is sure fire. The qualities that go to make up this last
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fact embrace every department from the story all through the entire course of
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production to the editing. The plot resembles a silk thread, thin but
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thoroughly strong enough to hold up the interest: but it is the manner of
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|
treatment that has enhanced its power, just as it was in the original novel.
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It contains genuine sentiment without being sentimental. William D. Taylor
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has staged the production with extreme good taste and an eye for all the
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possibilities to bring out the human appeal...
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January 14, 1922
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MOTION PICTURE NEWS
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|
...A better selection could not have been made than that of May McAvoy
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|
to appear in the charming role of Carlotta--the girl raised in a Turkish
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|
harem but who escapes to the Occident and is befriended by a bachelor who
|
|
possesses an indifference to women. One may appreciate the subtle quality of
|
|
romance in this situation. And trust Miss McAvoy to discover every whim and
|
|
impulse in the drawing. The role is similar to her Grizel in "Sentimental
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|
Tommy" in its wistfulness and appeal. Or perhaps it is the manner of the
|
|
star's interpretation. Whatever it is, she makes the part wholly lovable and
|
|
endows it with an appeal that is irresistible...It is a picture that is
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|
finely adapted. There is much of Locke's charm of situation about it. Also
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|
the characterization is well established. The director has brought out all
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|
the little details besides giving substance to the broader scenes.
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|
Pictorially the offering is a gem. The interiors are well conceived and
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|
executed with fitting harmony. "Morals" possesses considerable human
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|
interest. It may be light in the general aspect of its theme but there is no
|
|
denying its power to please anyone in search of innocent entertainment...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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The Green Temptation
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April 1, 1922
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EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
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|
Admirers of underworld drama will find much to please them in this
|
|
picture which provides pretty Betty Compson with numerous opportunities of
|
|
demonstrating her ability to play a triple role, in which she appears as a
|
|
member of an Apache gang, a dancer par excellence and finally a Red Cross
|
|
nurse. There are thrills galore, plenty of rapid-fire action, an interesting
|
|
love story and a finale in which hero and heroine conquer all obstacles to
|
|
their union and presumably live happy ever afterward. No expense has been
|
|
spared in the filming of this production, which is remarkable for its
|
|
luxurious settings and beautifully photographed. Despite its numerous
|
|
complications, the plot is easy to follow, the continuity being well
|
|
preserved and the feature, which was given a hearty reception when shown at
|
|
the Rivoli Theatre, New York, gives every indication of winning popularity.
|
|
The Apache den scenes are very realistic and the regeneration of the heroine
|
|
is brought about in a manner which is bound to secure plenty of sympathy for
|
|
that resourceful young lady...There are many handsomely filmed interiors, the
|
|
long shots are skillfully executed and superb lighting effects distinguish
|
|
the entire picture.
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|
|
April 1, 1922
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...While the story will not bear too close scrutiny as to probability
|
|
nor profit by a very close examination from the coincidence angle, it is
|
|
interesting. For one thing it provides a rapid shift of scene, embracing
|
|
views of several stratas of life, principally in Paris. Also it makes for
|
|
variety of action. The continuity is chunky at times, but it is as closely
|
|
knit together as possible, taking into consideration the extended time of
|
|
action and the many changes in locale called for by the story. William D.
|
|
Taylor, who directed the picture, grasped the many opportunities for a
|
|
producer to display his versatility, with the result that he has injected 100
|
|
per cent atmosphere in each divergent locale. And the action staged within
|
|
these interesting scenes is staged in a way that leaves nothing to be
|
|
desired.
|
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|
|
April 1, 1922
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
For about the first half of this picture, nothing of recent release can
|
|
eclipse it in atmosphere, incident, action or acting. Afterward there is a
|
|
slump that brings the average down to just a good picture that gives Betty
|
|
Compson wonderful acting opportunities and Theodore Kosloff a fine role as an
|
|
international crook. The principal fault of the tag of the story seems to be
|
|
that its perfect continuity of the first three reels becomes episodic and
|
|
involved. You see the heroine, an Apache thief, join the Red Cross in France
|
|
to escape arrest and then you are told that her experiences have purified her
|
|
soul. So far excellent. Then come detached sequences that have to be
|
|
explained by titles in which all the principal characters are brought
|
|
together again in America by dint of much dovetailing and with considerable
|
|
melodrama in connection with the theft of a certain emerald that has first
|
|
figured in the story when the local was in Paris. Miss Compson is the
|
|
dominant figure of the first part of the story and never has she appeared to
|
|
better advantage and never has her particular type of beauty been so
|
|
appealing. There has been a most painstaking attempt to make a really big
|
|
picture. Nothing in the way of sets, costuming, atmosphere has been stinted.
|
|
There is a fine cast of types playing even the bits. The camera work and
|
|
lightings are exceptional. The direction, William D. Taylor's last work, is
|
|
above reproach...
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|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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|
|
The Top of New York
|
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|
|
July 1, 1922
|
|
EXHIBITOR'S TRADE REVIEW
|
|
There is nothing extraordinarily original about the plot of this
|
|
picture, which offers the "poor but honest and beautiful working girl pursued
|
|
by a wealthy chap with evil intentions" for its heroine, a type with which
|
|
movie fans are extremely familiar. But the subject matter is so well handled
|
|
by the director, the late William D. Taylor, and cleverly acted by a capable
|
|
cast of players, that there is no hitch in the action and one's interest in
|
|
the fortunes and misfortunes of pretty Hilda O'Shaunnessey doesn't peter out
|
|
before her final triumph over adverse fate and snaring of a perfectly good
|
|
husband. "The Top of New York" is likely to win favor with that large class
|
|
of film patrons who are keen on sentiment served up in generous measure, with
|
|
villainy defeated and virtue properly victorious...The camera work throughout
|
|
is of the best quality, the roof and tenement views are realistic and good
|
|
lighting prevails. The action moves swiftly and the continuity is unbroken.
|
|
|
|
June 25, 1922
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
Sonya Levien, from whose story "The Top of New York" was made, and the
|
|
people who made it must be steadfast believers in the tried and true. "The
|
|
Top of New York," which was the featured attraction at the Rivoli last week,
|
|
has been assembled like a Ford car out of standardized parts. Watching the
|
|
picture, one feels that if any part broke down the chauffeur of the
|
|
projecting machine would have no trouble getting another part of fit--a few
|
|
feet of film from any picture showing around the corner could be dropped into
|
|
place without anybody knowing the difference. All the elements that have
|
|
gone into photoplays from the very beginning are in "The Top of New York"--
|
|
the poor-but-honest shop girl with the invalid brother for whose sake she is
|
|
almost willing to be less poor and far less honest; the low comedy aunt with
|
|
the sharp tongue and the heart of gold; the predatory shop owner who tries to
|
|
buy the P. but H. S. G.; and the noble artist who paints in a silken jacket
|
|
and a most romantic lack of faith in women. Add to these one drunken husband
|
|
for the low comedy aunt, one spinster saleswoman, Santa Claus, the tenements
|
|
and several shots of Christmas in the stores, and you have pretty nearly all
|
|
the parts required for any picture of this type. As a reflection of life, it
|
|
is utterly and completely false, but as an entertainment for those people
|
|
who, if they do not believe in fairies, have never ceased to believe in
|
|
Bertha M. Clay, it is well nigh perfect. There is no doubt that there is a
|
|
public for "The Top of New York" and that this public will enjoy the film
|
|
very much indeed. George Hopkins, the scenario writer, and the late William
|
|
Desmond Taylor, who directed the film, did their best to minimize its
|
|
conventionality, but what a pity that the Lasky organization should so
|
|
persistently waste May McAvoy on such trivial material. The leading role of
|
|
Miss Levine's story calls for no ability to act--so why hand it to May
|
|
McAvoy, who can--that is, when she's given a chance? The only consolation
|
|
about the picture is the thought of what it might have been had it issued
|
|
from less expert hands. And this is rather sorry comfort!
|
|
|
|
July 1, 1922
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
"The Top of New York" relates a sob story in such a way that what might
|
|
have been made maudlin is deflected into direct sympathy, human appeal and
|
|
genuine sentiment. Many things have contributed to this result but the most
|
|
outstanding are the manner in which the picture has been directed and
|
|
atmospherically mounted and the selection of an able cast comprised of
|
|
players that give fine performances, and in each instance seem just the right
|
|
person for the role. With the pathos is intermingled a generous supply of
|
|
comedy that comes as welcome relief considering the story is laid in sordid
|
|
surroundings...
|
|
|
|
July 1, 1922
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Cinderella has returned again disguised as a New York shop girl who
|
|
meets her Prince Charming on the roof of her squalid home. There is nothing
|
|
new or novel in this story. It is entirely too long and filled with
|
|
stereotyped characters and situations. And the director has stressed the
|
|
sticky sentiment to the point where reality never has a chance. You look
|
|
upon this poor, but sweet, Irish girl whose chief interest in life is
|
|
centered upon her little crippled brother. For company she has a garrulous
|
|
aunt, the latter's besodden husband, an employer who would bring her to
|
|
shame, and a struggling artist bereft of his wife. This group strut through
|
|
a series of scenes filled with the moss-covered stock situations...You can
|
|
see the happiness building from the first reel, though the suffering figures
|
|
must experience severe trials before good fortune smiles upon them. As it is
|
|
made in California the snow storm never appears genuine. However, it adds in
|
|
suggesting pathos for the youngster during a "blizzard" and he is forced to
|
|
find shelter. The subtitles are many, which, of course, makes the picture
|
|
look padded. The chief fault of the offering is in burying May McAvoy's
|
|
talents. The star who played Grizel never has a chance to ring a true note.
|
|
A blonde wig covers her attractive dark hair--presumably to keep in character
|
|
with the idea that all shop girls are blonde. It is an old-fashioned picture
|
|
in every department and only the sentimentalists will appreciate it.
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available on the Web at any of the following:
|
|
http://www.angelfire.com/az/Taylorology/
|
|
http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/Taylorology/
|
|
http://www.silent-movies.com/Taylorology/
|
|
Full text searches of back issues can be done at http://www.etext.org/Zines/
|
|
or at http://www.silent-movies.com/search.html. For more information about
|
|
Taylor, see
|
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
|
|
*****************************************************************************
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