अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA woman finds herself all alone in a remote harbor with the man responsible for the murder of her father. With seemingly nobody around to protect her, she has to be resourceful.A woman finds herself all alone in a remote harbor with the man responsible for the murder of her father. With seemingly nobody around to protect her, she has to be resourceful.A woman finds herself all alone in a remote harbor with the man responsible for the murder of her father. With seemingly nobody around to protect her, she has to be resourceful.
Wellington A. Playter
- Capt. Rydal
- (as Wellington Plater)
Ronald Byram
- Peter Burke (original casting)
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
William Colvin
- Mountie Shot by Rydal
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Roy Laidlaw
- Baptiste LeBeau, Dolores' Father
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Kewpie Morgan
- Bully in Bar Who Shoots Chinaman
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Charles Murphy
- The Half-Breed
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Hard to rate this thing on anything other than a funny reminder of
how Canada was and will always be renowned for Mounties,
snow, and wildlife. The scandalous "nude scene" where Nell Shipman is bathing
under a waterfall is what gave this film an audience, but definitely
not why it's still around today. It's actually a decent story where the
spirit of a dead Eskimo is incarnated into a husky, but that angle
doesn't really have any significance until the end of the film when
it's revisited. Most surprisingly, I found, was how progressive of a role Nell had
way back in 1919. She drives the plot and essentially rescues
herself from a lot of the danger, something Hollywood is still
reluctant to do. It wasn't actually the first feature film made in Canada
("Evangeline" was in 1913), but it's the earliest one left that has
been preserved. If for no other reason, you gotta check it our just
for that!
how Canada was and will always be renowned for Mounties,
snow, and wildlife. The scandalous "nude scene" where Nell Shipman is bathing
under a waterfall is what gave this film an audience, but definitely
not why it's still around today. It's actually a decent story where the
spirit of a dead Eskimo is incarnated into a husky, but that angle
doesn't really have any significance until the end of the film when
it's revisited. Most surprisingly, I found, was how progressive of a role Nell had
way back in 1919. She drives the plot and essentially rescues
herself from a lot of the danger, something Hollywood is still
reluctant to do. It wasn't actually the first feature film made in Canada
("Evangeline" was in 1913), but it's the earliest one left that has
been preserved. If for no other reason, you gotta check it our just
for that!
It is interesting to see Dolores LeBeau (Nell Shipman) participate in two roles in this movie, one being the pseudo-nude scene, and other being the role of female heroine. The former was certainly written into the script to draw male viewers to the movie houses. It cannot be seen that she is wearing a body suit, so one is given to their imagination. More importantly, however, is the latter - the female heroine - which was rare during that time.
The movie has several questional elements in the plotline (why does 'Sealskin' Blake have no trouble killing a Canadian Mountie, but cannot bring himself to overtly kill Dolores LeBeau's husband?), but the movie has several special effects (tinted film, scene within a scene) that make it worthwhile viewing.
The movie has several questional elements in the plotline (why does 'Sealskin' Blake have no trouble killing a Canadian Mountie, but cannot bring himself to overtly kill Dolores LeBeau's husband?), but the movie has several special effects (tinted film, scene within a scene) that make it worthwhile viewing.
This story is based loosely on a novel, not by Jack London, but similar to his "White Fang" and "Call of the Wild" in genre. It has been freely adapted to give most exposure to Nell Shipman who even in the flat lighting usual in the 1919 era comes across as a very capable "Jane Alexander" type. The simple story of villainy stemming from single-minded lust is confusingly told. That may be the result, though, of the difficulties of "restoration" of the old film. There are some excellent scenes that evoke the dreadful loneliness of the arctic winters. It's not a great old museum piece, but interesting and worth a watch.
BACK TO GOD'S COUNTRY (1919) was one of the major successes of Canadian film pioneer Nell Shipman. It has the distinction of being the oldest surviving Canadian feature film and was also the subject of a great deal of controversy because of Shipman's nude outdoor bathing scene at the beginning. Based on a then well known Canadian story about a heroic dog (think THE CALL OF THE WILD), the movie was shot under extremely harrowing conditions.
Much of the action takes place on ice flows and was shot at temperatures as low as 60 degrees below zero. One of the principal actors developed pneumonia and died during the shooting. Shipman was a virtual one woman show on this project. In addition to starring, she also wrote, co-produced, and co-directed without credit. The film was officially credited to a director named David Hartford.
The second feature SOMETHING NEW (1920) features a novel twist on the old Western theme of kidnapping and rescuing the damsel in distress. The hero, instead of riding a horse, drives a car. The film was primarily financed by the Maxwell Car Company (Jack Benny's car) and serves as a large scale ad for their product.
The car goes over rugged terrain and along cliffs that no vehicle at the time would dream of doing. The result is a delightful spoof of traditional Westerns that manages to be exciting at the same time. This time Nell gets a directing credit. Originally available on VHS as part of Milestone Film's EQUAL TIME: THE WOMEN OF CINEMA - THE FILMMAKERS series. For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
Much of the action takes place on ice flows and was shot at temperatures as low as 60 degrees below zero. One of the principal actors developed pneumonia and died during the shooting. Shipman was a virtual one woman show on this project. In addition to starring, she also wrote, co-produced, and co-directed without credit. The film was officially credited to a director named David Hartford.
The second feature SOMETHING NEW (1920) features a novel twist on the old Western theme of kidnapping and rescuing the damsel in distress. The hero, instead of riding a horse, drives a car. The film was primarily financed by the Maxwell Car Company (Jack Benny's car) and serves as a large scale ad for their product.
The car goes over rugged terrain and along cliffs that no vehicle at the time would dream of doing. The result is a delightful spoof of traditional Westerns that manages to be exciting at the same time. This time Nell gets a directing credit. Originally available on VHS as part of Milestone Film's EQUAL TIME: THE WOMEN OF CINEMA - THE FILMMAKERS series. For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
Contrived story surrounds a woman who is being blackmailed by a ship's captain who has killed her father and threatens to kills her ailing husband. She's saved by a dog. This is lifted a level above most of its ilk by the quality of its dark, harsh vision: from the first, we're in an arctic canada wher ruthlessness is the rule, as a dog's owner is killed in a bar for no reason (except that he's a "chinaman") much to the amusement of the bar's denizens. Good atmosphere.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाCritically ill, lead actor Ronald Byram left the shoot during the first two weeks and was replaced by Wheeler Oakman. It is probable that it is Byram in the close-ups in the sledge in the final chase scenes. Roy Laidlaw is frequently but erroneously referred to as Ralph Laidlaw in the trade press of the time. Edna Shipman did not act in this film as is sometimes claimed. The film opened at the Strand Theater in Owosso, Michigan, where it played for three days. Canadian Photoplays Ltd. was a Calgary-based company incorporated 7 February 1919 under the laws of Alberta. Shipman-Curwood Company was later called Curwood-Carver Productions Inc.
- भाव
Captain Rydal: [titlecard] After a night of evil dreams Rydal's smoldering desire leaps into flame.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Dreamland: A History of Early Canadian Movies 1895-1939 (1974)
- साउंडट्रैकBack to God's Country
Words by Paul M. Sarazan and Jack B. Weil
Music by Paul M. Sarazan
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $67,000(अनुमानित)
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 13 मिनट
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.33 : 1
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