Lo Dorman est né d'une Indienne et d'un blanc. Rejetée, la mère abandonne le bébé avant de se tuer. L'orphelin grandit, mais quand son père adoptif meurt, il devient marginal, le Métis, et d... Tout lireLo Dorman est né d'une Indienne et d'un blanc. Rejetée, la mère abandonne le bébé avant de se tuer. L'orphelin grandit, mais quand son père adoptif meurt, il devient marginal, le Métis, et doit s'exiler pour vivre seul dans les bois.Lo Dorman est né d'une Indienne et d'un blanc. Rejetée, la mère abandonne le bébé avant de se tuer. L'orphelin grandit, mais quand son père adoptif meurt, il devient marginal, le Métis, et doit s'exiler pour vivre seul dans les bois.
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That THE HALF-BREED came after the incredibly racist THE BIRTH OF A NATION is fascinating. The movie is not without its dated elements, but it is far more progressive in its call for tolerance and indictment of the white man's treatment of Native Americans than you would expect in a movie from 1916.
Doug Fairbanks is an actor more noted for his charisma and derring-do than his thespian chops. However, he does an admirable turn as Lo, the half-Native American, half-white outcast. This character is more somber than his usual roles, though no less active and principled. Sam De Grasse plays the villain as he often did for Fairbanks and he does well with his usual underplaying style.
However, the best performances come courtesy of Jewel Carmen and Alma Reubens. These two women get the meatiest roles in the movie: a flirtatious yet Machiavellian debutante flirting with scandal when she pursues Lo, and a world-weary con-woman on the run from the law and her own sordid past. Both bring great depth to these parts, neither fitting fully into the ingenue/vamp dichotomy you see in a lot of American films of the 1910s.
While THE BLACK PIRATE is my favorite Fairbanks movie, THE HALF-BREED is a close second. I absolutely enjoy watching this beautifully made movie and would recommend it to silent movie mavens.
THE HALF BREED tells the story of Lo Dorman whose Native American mother was abandoned by his white father resulting in her death. He then faces extreme ostracism from the townspeople of the small community he lives in. THE GOOD BAD MAN has him playing a Robin Hood like bandit named "Passing Through" who steals only what is needed and then gives it to those who need it most. Both films benefit from the presence of Sam De Grasse, Fairbanks' go to villain, who is nothing less than a silent film version of Alan Rickman. Both of these movies were helmed by Allan Dwan (1885-1981), a Canadian born director whose career spanned over 50 years and featured such titles as 2 Shirley Temple vehicles (HEIDI, REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM) and the John Wayne classic, THE SANDS OF IWO JIMA. His silent films are now making a comeback with the recent release of 3 Gloria Swanson films (ZAZA, MANHANDLED, STAGE STRUCK).
Kino Lorber has recently released a number of Paramount silents including 2 classic W. C. Fields comedies (IT'S THE OLD ARMY GAME, RUNNING WILD) and the epic Western THE COVERED WAGON. Two more titles on the horizon include a newly restored version of Josef von Sternberg's THE LAST COMMAND with Emil Jannings and the one I've been waiting on, OLD IRONSIDES with Charles Farrell & Esther Ralston. That just leaves THE DOCKS OF NEW YORK, Valentino's THE SHEIK, and Erich von Stroheim's THE WEDDING MARCH from the old VHS set of almost 30 years ago to be released on DVD/Blu-Ray. The 1923 THE TEN COMMANDMENTS and WINGS from that set have already been given deluxe editions... For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
*** (out of 4)
A young Indian woman brings her newborn son to the home of a white man where she drops it off and shortly later kills herself. The baby, part white and part Indian, grows up to live a normal life but when his caretaker dies, the townspeople run him out. Soon he sees various racial injustice and pretty soon finds himself in the woods with another outcast.
THE HALF-BREED isn't the greatest film ever made but it's certainly an entertaining one that fans of silent cinema should enjoy. Douglas Fairbanks plays the title character and does a very good job with the role. Obviously the actor is very energetic but he manages to handle the small, quiet scenes just as well as any of the stuff that has him running around. The actor was very believable as the somewhat naive man who doesn't realize that people will hate him just because of his skin color.
The film's story isn't all that original and deals with the half-breed going up against a sheriff who just happens to be his real father, although neither one realizes it. The film features some terrific visuals and especially the scenes in the forest. There's a terrific climax where a fire breaks out and the movie ends on a very poetic note. The main reason to watch this film is certainly for Fairbanks and you have to wonder what his female fans in 1916 thought about his nearly nude entrance at the start of the picture.
Unfortunately, the copy screened by the Museum of Modern Art is in poor shape. Only about twenty-five minutes of the one-hour feature could be screened, and the print showed a lot of damage. The titles, when possessed of any humor, are dour and there isn't much of Doug's usual stuntwork -- he clambers around the redwood forests of northern California for a bit and bends a young conifer double a couple of times to spring from one place to another. We do get a bit of beefcake in an early scene, where he is shown, stripped to the waist, but that's about it.
The rest is an open attack on racism. Doug, the titular half-breed is trapped in a small, nasty town full of racists who dislike him solely because he is an Indian. Of course, Jewel Carmen and Alma Rubens have yens for him, but besides showing jealousy when Doug is not present, do nothing about it. The genially corrupt individuals who inhabit most of Harte's better known works are not present. Instead, they are selfish, nasty and smug
It's difficult to judge the impact of this movie almost a hundred years after it was produced, but over all it looks like an earnest work with some good production values: an attempt to expand Doug's range as a movie star. Judging by the fact that he went back to his usual mode of movie until 1920s' THE MARK OF ZORRO, it almost certainly didn't take. Nor, judging by what remains, should it have.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesNew restoration by San Francisco Silent Film Festival, Film Preservation Society, and Cinémathèque Française completed in June 2013. Combines all extant unique material from Cinémathèque Française, Library of Congress, and Lobster Films; resulting in most complete version possible.
- Citations
Title Card: Betrayed by a white man, cast out by her own people, the Cherokee squaw wanders along the Sierra forests.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Amazing Tales from the Archives: Restoring The Half-Breed of 1916 (2013)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 13 minutes
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- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1