Agrega una trama en tu idiomaJohn Wall meets his new sweetheart and takes her to the movies; his neglected wife Anne follows them there. Molly, disobeying her parents, meets her boyfriend at the same theater. A working ... Leer todoJohn Wall meets his new sweetheart and takes her to the movies; his neglected wife Anne follows them there. Molly, disobeying her parents, meets her boyfriend at the same theater. A working man with his wife and children, all obsessed with the sordidness of their lives, also atte... Leer todoJohn Wall meets his new sweetheart and takes her to the movies; his neglected wife Anne follows them there. Molly, disobeying her parents, meets her boyfriend at the same theater. A working man with his wife and children, all obsessed with the sordidness of their lives, also attend the movie, as does a dishonorable young man. They watch a film called 'Life's Mirror' i... Leer todo
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- John & Anne's Child
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- Alberta's Daughter
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- Poor Family's Son
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- Undetermined Secondary Role
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Opiniones destacadas
From the picture I've gathered now from seeing 20-some films of Weber's and reading Anthony Slide and Shelley Stamp's respective books on her career, "Idle Wives" was peak Weber--almost as though much of her career had been leading up to its culmination. Most of the writing on Weber seems to tend to focus on the social messages of her films and secondarily on their technical accomplishments, but going by what's accessible today and that I've seen from 1910s cinema, what most impresses me is that she was a rare filmmaker whose work was fairly consistently reflexive of the art she made. Perhaps, the only somewhat comparable filmmaker from the time that comes to my mind would be from halfway around the world in Russian director Yevgeni Bauer, as well as perhaps some early Danish features. Both made one of their best films about ballet and death, Bauer's "The Dying Swan" (1917) and Weber's "The Dumb Girl of Portici" (1916), and other films that were poetic and focused heavily on visual arts. As I've mentioned elsewhere, Weber included statue in "From Death to Life" (1911), painting in "Fine Feathers," reproduced photographs in "A Japanese Idyll" (both 1912) and "How Men Propose" (1913, although Weber's involvement in the latter remains unconfirmed), acting in "Lost by a Hair," theatre in "False Colors" (both 1914), and mirrors and reflections in "Suspense" (also 1913), "Hypocrites" (1915) and, later, "Too Wise Wives" (1921). And, those are just her films for which at least some footage remains and not including the courtroom-as-stage in such a film as "Where Are My Children?," the focus on literature and shop windows in "Shoes" (both 1916), or camera masking and song in "The Rosary" (1913).
So, it seems natural that Weber would eventually make a picture with the most direct of reflexive devices, of the film-within-the-film. And, while there were quite a few movies about going to the movies even back then (there's an entire thread devoted to the topic at the Nitrateville message boards), from "The Countryman and the Cinematograph" (1901) to "Sherlock Jr." (1924), few are integrated so thoroughly and none quite in the same way as in "Idle Wives." Indeed, Weber was a cinematic lecturer, so the inner film here is also a lecture and one that is within the larger lecture that is "Idle Wives." One film for us to identify and be instructed and a film inside for the characters and surrogate audience on screen to do the same. Quite the consistent parallel of an abstraction. Us watching our doubles on screen watching their doubles on another screen. Moreover, the inner film is titled "Life's Mirror" and is advertised at the movie theatre in the film as "by Lois Weber." Talk about exposing the artifice, which is what reflexive filmmaking does in the first place by reminding the spectator that they're watching a movie. Forget the hooey about so-called suspension of disbelief; Weber wanted movie-goers to be thinking, including in her best work about the art form or diegesis in which her lectures were presented. How else is a spectator not supposed to treat a film as a mere entertainment to be easily consumed and as quickly disposed of thereafter, although the irony is that's exactly what happened to "Idle Wives" for most of its history so far anyways.
Nothing definitive may be said of a film fragment, but the teaser that remains suggests other potentially interesting ways in which the meta-construction is devised. The film-within-the-film seems to be mostly represented by crosscutting between it and the audience reactions--perhaps further blending "reality" and fiction. There are also flashbacks or internal visualizations within the "reality," and the film stars a female stenographer, which perhaps like Weber's "Scandal" (1915) may reference Weber as the writer of the film. The movie theatre here, too, is no nickelodeon that one might see in earlier such films--even Keystone comedies. It's a theatre that reflects the middle-class aspirations of Weber's filmmaking address.
Also similar to "Scandal," interesting here is the roles played on and off screen by Weber and her husband and alleged-co-director Phillips Smalley. Note that they're both credited for "Idle Wives," but only Weber is given authorship of "Life's Mirror." Unlike in earlier films, too, Weber is credited before her husband in the outer film. As Stamp's book and her essay, "Presenting the Smalleys, 'collaborators in authorship and direction," point out, the couple were prominently presented in the press as an idealized bourgeois couple bringing their relative gendered qualifications to their filmic collaboration. In contrast, in what remains of "Idle Wives," the two on screen play a married couple who've drifted apart. And another couple represents the traditional gender dichotomy of the housewife and husband in the workforce. It's not always clear what is more true or false, or the gradations within on all levels, between the world and press outside the film, the world within the film and the film within that film. Life's mirror, indeed.
We see people from various walks of life -- accompanied by titles that announce that the character represents a type -- heading to a movie theater in which they see a Lois Weber film entitled "Life's Mirror". Indeed it is, with all the types repeated, only this time their environment is changed. In the "real world" the photography is very strong,with sharply defined naturalistic compositions. People are framed by doors, windows, archways and all the unadorned devices that can be used to produce sharp images. Their world is simple, clear, easily understood. The world of the movie they go to, in contrast, is cluttered with objects lying about, coats hanging on doors, complicating the image and making the subject murky.
So is this a commentary on formalism itself? Did Weber feel that the audience was up to appreciating this satirical jab at her own art? Frankly, I doubt it. I think the message of the movie can be summed up in one title, in which one of the children suggests that they go out to the movies and have a good time instead of staying at home and having a bad one.
I am almost certainly overthinking this movie. The modern film-goer, even one who enjoys the occasional silent film, will not notice the occasional nice panning shot or fade cut -- both had to be done with a bulky heavy camera when this piece was shot. The modern viewer will find this slow and preachy. These are issues I cannot dispute. Still, for 1916, it's a very good piece of film making.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis film was thought to be lost entirely until the first reel was discovered in the holdings of the New Zealand Film Archive. This is still only a small portion of the film. The rest is still believed to be lost.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 10 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1