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Les Deux Orphelines

Titre original : Orphans of the Storm
  • 1921
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 30min
NOTE IMDb
7,3/10
5,7 k
MA NOTE
Les Deux Orphelines (1921)
Orphans Of The Storm: I'll See For You
Lire clip2:37
Regarder Orphans Of The Storm: I'll See For You
1 Video
78 photos
Drame costuméDrame politiqueDrames historiquesÉpiqueÉpopée historiqueÉpopée romantiqueDrameL'histoireRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo orphaned sisters are caught up in the turmoil of the French Revolution, encountering misery and love along the way.Two orphaned sisters are caught up in the turmoil of the French Revolution, encountering misery and love along the way.Two orphaned sisters are caught up in the turmoil of the French Revolution, encountering misery and love along the way.

  • Réalisation
    • D.W. Griffith
  • Scénario
    • Adolphe d'Ennery
    • Eugène Cormon
    • D.W. Griffith
  • Casting principal
    • Lillian Gish
    • Dorothy Gish
    • Joseph Schildkraut
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,3/10
    5,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Scénario
      • Adolphe d'Ennery
      • Eugène Cormon
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Casting principal
      • Lillian Gish
      • Dorothy Gish
      • Joseph Schildkraut
    • 52avis d'utilisateurs
    • 26avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Vidéos1

    Orphans Of The Storm: I'll See For You
    Clip 2:37
    Orphans Of The Storm: I'll See For You

    Photos78

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    + 70
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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Lillian Gish
    Lillian Gish
    • Henriette Girard
    Dorothy Gish
    Dorothy Gish
    • Louise Girard
    Joseph Schildkraut
    Joseph Schildkraut
    • Chevalier de Vaudrey
    Frank Losee
    Frank Losee
    • Count de Linieres
    Katherine Emmet
    • Countess de Linieres
    Morgan Wallace
    Morgan Wallace
    • Marquis de Praille
    Lucille La Verne
    Lucille La Verne
    • Mother Frochard
    Sheldon Lewis
    Sheldon Lewis
    • Jacques Frochard
    Frank Puglia
    Frank Puglia
    • Pierre Frochard
    Creighton Hale
    Creighton Hale
    • Picard
    Monte Blue
    Monte Blue
    • Danton
    Sidney Herbert
    Sidney Herbert
    • Robespierre
    Lee Kohlmar
    • King Louis XVI
    Marcia Harris
    Marcia Harris
    • Henriette's Landlady
    Adolph Lestina
    • Doctor
    Kate Bruce
    Kate Bruce
    • Sister Genevieve
    Flora Finch
    Flora Finch
    • Starving Peasant
    Louis Wolheim
    Louis Wolheim
    • Executioner
    • Réalisation
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Scénario
      • Adolphe d'Ennery
      • Eugène Cormon
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs52

    7,35.6K
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    Avis à la une

    Snow Leopard

    Often Exciting, Often Moving, & A Triumph For the Gish Sisters

    The story is often exciting and often moving, yet the chance to see Lillian and Dorothy Gish together might be the best reason of all to watch Griffith's silent classic, "Orphans of the Storm". The story combines the tumultuous backdrop of the French Revolution with a worthwhile melodrama involving the ordeals of two sisters who are practically alone in the world.

    The French Revolution used to be a frequent setting for some fine films - between the ideas involved and the upheavals that it brought, it's almost ready-made for cinema. Here, as the two sisters, Lillian and Dorothy are struggling to help each other when they are caught up in the turmoil around them, and they find themselves involved with everyone from the lowest classes of society up to some of the best-known personalities of the Revolution.

    The historical background is often stylized, and it is mainly there to lend drama to the story about the sisters, rather than to provide an accurate look at history. The characterizations of some of the revolutionary leaders are interesting, but they are not always accurate. Yet from a purely dramatic viewpoint it works well. The involved story, along with the personal appeal of Gish sisters, combine to win the audience's sympathy quickly, and to heighten the tension as the story plays out. It's a well-acted and memorable melodrama.
    dbdumonteil

    DW Griffith storyteller extraordinaire.

    Adolphe D'Ennery's novel was one of those countless melodramatic maudlin stories which were thriving in France of the 19th century. DW Griffith decided to transpose the action just before and after French revolution.The novel was rather reactionary and its historical background was thin and vague.

    But Griffith's vision of the French Revolution is naive,to put it mildly.He was not apparently aware that the 1789 events were mainly a bourgeois move,and the poor were only a tool.The dichotomy Good Danton/Wicked Robespierre should make people who are looking for a sort of historical accuracy have a look at Wajda"s "Danton"(with G.Depardieu,in the eighties).

    Forget history and you have a two-hour and a half silent movie with never a dull moment.Griffith is a wonderful storyteller,who had a great respect for his audience.Some sequences are still impressive today:the aristocratic orgy,when the Poor are starving at the gates of the palace is far from D'Ennery's timid depiction of the scene in the book;Lillian Gish,a wonderful actress who 'd been part of the cinema till the eighties,is so powerful in her part of the abducted maiden Henriette we can almost hear her when she screams out of despair:"is there a man of honor among you?Louise and the shrew who got her under her thumb begging in front of the cathedral as the snow is falling is a splendid picture,recalling a painter's work;even if Danton's coming to the rescue of a soon-to-be guillotined Henriette is thoroughly implausible,we cannot help but admire the director's maestria.

    Few silent movies have stood the test of time as well as this one.
    10Ron Oliver

    Silent Spectacle

    Two ORPHANS OF THE STORM caused by the French Revolution desperately search for each other in the violent chaos of Paris.

    History's sweeping drama comes alive in this powerful epic film from legendary silent movie genius D. W. Griffith. Although much happens on a broad canvas, the director never loses sight of the intimate details of the heroines' pitiful plight. In denouncing tyranny, Griffith always manages to keep the viewer engrossed in how the State's insidious evil affects the individual.

    Much of the film's success is due to the remarkable acting of the Gish Sisters, Lillian & Dorothy. Acclaimed for her comedic talents, Dorothy here gives an almost completely serious performance, portraying a blind girl cruelly separated from her beloved sister and forced to beg in the streets. Lillian, her classic face mirroring a myriad of emotions, plays the sibling persecuted by both lecherous aristocrats and rapacious revolutionaries. The scene in which Lillian, in an upper chamber, hears Dorothy singing in the alley below but is unable to reach her, is almost unbearable in its emotional intensity.

    A young Joseph Schildkraut plays Lillian's blue-blooded suitor, giving the viewer an intimation of the very fine character actor he would become with the advent of talking pictures. Lucille LaVerne steals more than a few scenes as the filthy harridan who enslaves and terrorizes Dorothy. Frank Puglia makes a poignant mark as Miss LaVerne's pathetic, downtrodden son. Comic actor Creighton Hale gives a lively performance in a small role as a mischievous, periwiged servant.

    A fascinating aspect of the film is its vivid rendering of two historical characters of great significance in the history of France. Georges Danton was probably not as noble as he is portrayed by Monte Blue, nor was Maximilien Robespierre necessarily as evil as Sidney Herbert depicts him. What is certain is that both men were responsible for the deaths of thousands of individuals during the Reign of Terror. Fittingly, each man had his own rendezvous with Madame Le Guillotine in 1794.

    Movie mavens will recognize an unbilled Louis Wolheim as the executioner awaiting Miss Lillian on the scaffold.

    Griffith handles the sequences involving surging masses of extras with admirable dexterity. He also freely borrows a few plot elements from Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities. In fact Miss LaVerne, with scarcely a costume change, would play the role of The Vengeance in MGM's 1935 version of that classic, violent novel.
    gerdav

    A Great Accomplishment

    I sometimes feel that people who are not sympathetic to the silent era and its genre should not view or comment on them.

    As a long-time maven of silent films, I have no problem placing myself in that era and enjoying these movies on their own terms. Much has changed since those days, and most folks simply cannot appreciate the simplicity AND complexity of photoplays without words.

    This film is magnificent and entertaining. I am not a fan of most "period pieces", but this transcends the typical fare. Check it out.
    7Doylenf

    Visually impressive melodrama is wildly overacted but still compelling to watch...

    ORPHANS OF THE STORM is quite an impressive looking silent film from D.W. Griffith, who was obviously the Cecil B. DeMille of his day. He has an instinct for showing surging crowd scenes involving all the unrest during the French Revolution and these scenes are highly detailed and very arresting visually. All the sets and costumes look as though a lavish budget was spent on this story of two sisters who survive the French Revolution after many melodramatic twists and turns of their fortune.

    DOROTHY GISH and LILLIAN GISH are the sisters, with Dorothy as the blind waif who is separated from her sister when an overly amorous nobleman orders Lillian to be brought to his orgy. From there on, the Dickensian plot becomes thicker and thicker as the girls suffer one indignity after another in order to survive.

    LUCILLE LaVERNE is the old hag (she later was the model for Disney's Wicked Witch in "Snow White"), a harridan who makes Dorothy a beggar in the streets. "You'll shiver better without a shawl," is one of her immortal lines.

    Joseph SCHILDKRAUT is very impressive in an early American screen role, demonstrating charm and skill of the kind that would land him important parts in future costume films like "Marie Antoinette." MONTE BLUE is Danton, a man who meets LILLIAN GISH early in the story and later becomes the defender who saves her and Schildkraut from the guillotine.

    It's all very melodramatic, the acting ranging from overdone to wildly overdone. Griffith was never subtle in asking his performers to give it their all. Excessive wringing of hands, eye-rolling to show anguish, fierce looks to show hatred, etc. may cause unintended chuckles when viewed by today's audiences, but there is never any letdown in the telling of a compelling story using the French Revolution as rich background material for a tale of villainy and heroism.

    A fascinating silent film with an appropriate film score added to give the story even more force and flavor.

    Summing up: Overlong drama, but compelling from the start to the feverishly melodramatic end.

    Exquisite close-ups of Lillian Gish are touching and lend poignant charm to her performance.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      William J. Walsh, an extra playing a soldier, was killed on set when a prop rifle he was leaning on went off by accident; although the weapon was loaded with a blank cartridge, the wadding from a blank fired at point-blank range is capable of inflicting serious injury or death.
    • Gaffes
      When the Bastille is taken, the prisoners are freed. There are many of them. In reality, only seven prisoners were freed during the taking of the Bastille.
    • Citations

      Title Card: [Opening lines] TIME, - Before and during the French Revolution. Our story is of two little orphans who suffer first through the tyranny - selfishness - of Kingly bosses, nobles and aristocrats. After the King's Government falls they suffer with the rest of the people as much through the new Government, established by the pussy-footing Robespierre through Anarchy and Bolshevism. Strange that both these evil rulers were otherwise highly moral men except that they saw evil in all who did not THINK AS THEY DID. The lesson - the French Revolution RIGHTLY overthrew a BAD government. But we in America should be careful lest we with a GOOD government mistake fanatics for leaders and exchange our decent law and order for Anarchy and Bolshevism.

    • Crédits fous
      The starring Gish sisters are not listed in the opening credits. They are introduced on title cards as "Louise--Miss Dorothy Gish" and "Henriette--Miss Lillian Gish."
    • Connexions
      Edited into Le Capital au XXIe siècle (2019)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Orphans of the Storm?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 15 septembre 1922 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Orphans of the Storm
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Mamaroneck, New York, États-Unis(D.W. Griffith: Father of Film)
    • Société de production
      • D.W. Griffith Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 1 000 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 2h 30min(150 min)
    • Mixage
      • Silent
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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