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IMDbPro

The False Faces

  • 1919
  • 1h 36min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.0/10
131
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Henry B. Walthall in The False Faces (1919)
DramaGuerra

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaDuring World War I, a professional thief known as The Lone Wolf is assigned to steal a cylinder with important information from behind the German lines and bring it to Allied intelligence he... Leer todoDuring World War I, a professional thief known as The Lone Wolf is assigned to steal a cylinder with important information from behind the German lines and bring it to Allied intelligence headquarters. However, German agents set out to stop him, headed by the man who was responsi... Leer todoDuring World War I, a professional thief known as The Lone Wolf is assigned to steal a cylinder with important information from behind the German lines and bring it to Allied intelligence headquarters. However, German agents set out to stop him, headed by the man who was responsible for the death of the thief's sister.

  • Dirección
    • Irvin Willat
  • Guionistas
    • Louis Joseph Vance
    • Irvin Willat
  • Elenco
    • Henry B. Walthall
    • Mary Anderson
    • Lon Chaney
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.0/10
    131
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Irvin Willat
    • Guionistas
      • Louis Joseph Vance
      • Irvin Willat
    • Elenco
      • Henry B. Walthall
      • Mary Anderson
      • Lon Chaney
    • 11Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 3Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos6

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    Elenco principal11

    Editar
    Henry B. Walthall
    Henry B. Walthall
    • Michael Lanyard
    Mary Anderson
    Mary Anderson
    • Cecilia Brooke
    Lon Chaney
    Lon Chaney
    • Karl Eckstrom
    Milton Ross
    • Ralph Crane
    Thornton Edwards
    Thornton Edwards
    • Lt. Thackery
    William J. Bauman
    William J. Bauman
    • Capt. Osborne
    • (as William Bowman)
    Garry McGarry
    Garry McGarry
    • Submarine Lieutenant
    Ernest Pasque
    • Blensop
    W.H. Bainbridge
    • Col. Stanistreet
    • (sin créditos)
    Jacqueline Gadsdon
    Jacqueline Gadsdon
    • Sea Corpse Ghost
    • (sin créditos)
    Steve Murphy
    • Soldier in Trenches
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Irvin Willat
    • Guionistas
      • Louis Joseph Vance
      • Irvin Willat
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios11

    6.0131
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7AlsExGal

    Action-packed wartime spy caper from producer Thomas Ince and director Irvin Willat.

    Henry B. Walthall stars as Michael Lanyard, aka the Lone Wolf, a notorious master thief who went legit when War was declared in Europe. After Lanyard's sister and nephew are killed by German agent Ekstrom (Lon Chaney), Walthall joins the war effort as a spy, but with the primary motive of tracking down and killing Ekstrom. His road to vengeance leads him back across the sea to America and to a nest of the Kaiser's spies in New York.

    There are enough big action moments and suspenseful situations in this to make me think it could have been a condensed serial, but it's not. There are shoot-outs, fisticuffs, swapped identities, a sought-after MacGuffin, and, as the title implies, no one is who they claim to be. Walthall is really terrific here, and judged along with his other roles from the period that I've seen, makes a strong case for best actor of the 1910's. Chaney gets to be really dastardly, and also gets a few disguises of his own.
    7zpzjones

    Decent WW1 film MADE during WW1

    The story for "The False Faces" is taken from a novel by Louis Joseph Vance based on a character he created called 'The Lone Wolf'. Films about WW1 made during WW1 are interesting. The opening stages of Irvin Willat's "The False Faces" hark forward six & eleven years to the battle sequences in "The Big Parade" & "All's Quiet on the Western Front" respectively. Indeed both King Vidor & Lewis Milestone must've viewed portions of this film. 1919 was a break out year for Lon Chaney with "The Wicked Darling", "Victory", and the hugely successful "The Miracle Man". "The False Faces" is Chaney's first film of 1919 so it was probably made while WW1 was still going on(before November 11 1918). The film actually stars Henry B. Walthall as a Sidney Reilly type spy, 'The Lone Wolf'. Quite possibly a double agent. The movie is a potpurri of a spy cheating officials and officials cheating the spy. Director Willat has scenes that occur on board a real passenger liner and later in a submarine. Amazing that Willat could obtain the use of a sub for his film. Chaney plays a man called Ekstrom in several disguises & whom 'The Lone Wolf' harbors a personal vengeance against. Ekstrom is a German w/spiked helmet, an officer on an ocean liner, a sub captain and a shaven adventurer in drawing room back on shore. An actress called Mary Anderson plays the sole female character in this film. A popular and pretty actress in the silents, she's all but forgotten today. Irving Willat's brother, Edwin Willat, is the cinematographer. The print of this film survives generally in good condition but some of the intertitles are so blacked out that they can't be read. Grapevine video actually replaced key titles so to hold the viewer to the story. The latter part of the film tends to get melodramatic. But the highlight scenes are on a real passenger liner(makes some think of the Titanic & Lusitania) and a real submarine with scenes that hark forward to 'Destination Tokyo' and 'Das Boot'. Most films about WW1 made during WW1 tend to be propaganda or over the top grotesque comedies aimed at Germans. This movie is a little bit of both but alas one of the more tamer films compared to others.
    6psteier

    Beautifully reconstructed print but not much of a movie

    Henry B. Walthall (Michael Lanyard, also known as The Lone Wolf) struggles to get an important document from behind the German Lines to British Intelligence in New York with help from US operatives Mary Anderson (Cecilia Brooke) and Thornton Edwards (Lieutenant Thackery). However, they must evade German Intelligence agents headed by the dastardly Lon Chaney (Karl Eckstrom).

    Made as anti-German propaganda during the war starting from a pulp fiction story. Lon Chaney fans may be disappointed since he mainly plays a secondary role.

    The reconstructed print was mode from very good materials and is wonderfully tinted. Unfortunately, some of the titles are hard to read.
    7springfieldrental

    The First Browning/Chaney Film

    Universal Studios Vice President Irving Thalberg felt veteran movie director Tod Browning would have good chemistry with rising actor Lon Chaney when he paired them up in February 1919's "The Wicked Darling." Thalberg's intuition was spot-on as the two clicked right away, delivering a powerful performance by Chaney as a small-time pickpocketer. Chaney, who wouldn't become a household name until later in the year, dialed into his devious character by presenting a scary portrayal of a thief who would kill for a pearl necklace.

    Actress Priscilla Dean, who had worked with Browning in the past and be one of the director's favorite actresses in the future, plays a guttersnipe who spots a pearl necklace a lady has accidentally dropped, and proceeds to scope it up and run. Trouble is, Chaney sees her performance, setting off a one-man hunt for the necklace.

    Most viewers know Browning as the director of the Beli Lugosi's 1931 "Dracula," cinema's first talkie horror film. "The Wicked Darling" falls under Browning's "crooked melodramas," a grouping of his movies involving petty thieves and swindlers. His fluid editing and camera angles stands in contrast to Chaney's other film released in February 1919, "The False Faces," directed by Irvin Wallit.

    Chaney plays a familiar role in "The False Faces" which he had played in the past: an evil, murderous German intelligent agent during World War One. At the time "The Faces" was produced, movie studios didn't feel a need to hire full-time makeup artists. Actors had to rely on either theater makeup personnel to apply their cosmetics or learn to do it themselves. Chaney was one of the few who had learned the craft of sophisticated makeup: in all his roles he did his own characters' cosmetics. His marketability increased by the knowledge he could apply different, convincing disguises.

    There's a scene in "The False Faces" where he makes himself in the guise of a bearded professor-type person, the only time in his career showing him applying make-up on himself on camera. Chaney also lent his expertise with other cast members: he made up actress Jane Daly to look like a "sea-corpse" when she springs up in the scene to scare the bejesus out of the haunted U-Boat captain.
    6scsu1975

    Generally entertaining

    At the front during World War I, Michael Lanyard, aka "The Lone Wolf," makes it to the Allied trenches and claims he has secret information on the Germans. In a flashback, we learn that some time ago, a German force led by Karl Eckstrom had murdered Lanyard's sister and her child. Now Lanyard wants to get to America, and also get even with Eckstrom, who is currently a member of the German Secret Service. Lanyard books passage on a steamship, where he meets Cecilia Brooks. One night he rescues her when a stranger accosts her. Cecilia gives Lanyard a small cylinder which she claims is vital to the Allied cause. Later, Lanyard is attacked in his stateroom by thugs who demand he turn over the cylinder. He manages to overpower one of them, and recognizes the other as Eckstrom, who escapes with the cylinder. Lanyard gives chase, but Eckstrom throws him overboard. A German submarine fires on the steamship. Lanyard, drifting in the water, finds himself on top of the surfacing submarine. He tells the Germans he is a German spy, thus sparing his life. The sub heads for Martha's Vineyard, where the Germans have established a secret base. Lanyard eventually makes his way to New York, where he discovers that Cecilia and others have survived the submarine attack. Meanwhile, Eckstrom, posing as The Lone Wolf, turns over the cylinder to the British Secret Service in New York, pocketing a ransom of $10,000. Lanyard witnesses the transaction. Eckstrom later returns to the office, intending to take back the cylinder. Lanyard lies in wait. The two enemies scuffle, and Eckstrom escapes. Later, Eckstrom kidnaps Cecilia, and Lanyard rushes to her rescue, setting up the final showdown between the two.

    Because of the lousy print (with an even lousier organ score which I eventually turned off), I didn't enjoy this as much as I probably should have. A few scenes were completely unviewable, and many of the title cards were difficult to read. Still, one could get the sense of what was happening, and most of what I saw was entertaining. The film, for the most part, faithfully follows the novel (which is itself a good read). There is a much cleaner version on YouTube, but it's about 20 minutes shorter.

    It was fun to see a rather spry and handsome Henry B. Walthall running around, engaging in a few stunts, and even getting into a good slugfest with Chaney. There is an interesting moment in the film when the commander of the submarine and one of his officers have an argument. The officer, who is from Prussia, tells Lanyard that the commander is a "Bavarian dog." This seems to be an attempt to show that not all Germans were rats. This point is hammered home even more when we are informed that the German commander is the same guy who sunk the Lusitania. Boo. Hiss. Another interesting scene occurs later in the film, when Lanyard breaks into the safe in the British Secret Service office in an attempt to retrieve the cylinder before Eckstrom can get it. As he goes through the contents, Lanyard (a former jewel thief) discovers a necklace, and temptation strikes.

    The acting, direction, and sets are pretty good. I would have liked to have seen more of Mary Anderson; she doesn't get enough screen time, and she seemed to be spunky.

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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 16 de febrero de 1919 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Ninguno
    • También se conoce como
      • The Further Career and Adventures of the Lone Wolf
    • Productora
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 36min(96 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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