अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंAnnie remains faithful to her husband, Enoch, even though he's been lost at sea for many years. Finally her grown children convince her to marry Philip, her former suitor. Enoch is rescued f... सभी पढ़ेंAnnie remains faithful to her husband, Enoch, even though he's been lost at sea for many years. Finally her grown children convince her to marry Philip, her former suitor. Enoch is rescued from the deserted isle where he has been stranded, and returns home. He discovers Annie's n... सभी पढ़ेंAnnie remains faithful to her husband, Enoch, even though he's been lost at sea for many years. Finally her grown children convince her to marry Philip, her former suitor. Enoch is rescued from the deserted isle where he has been stranded, and returns home. He discovers Annie's new life, and decides not to interrupt her happiness.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
- In Bar
- (as Charles H. West)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
In this concluding part, which should really only be viewed as part of a whole film with part I, Griffith continues to use subtle and considered technique to convey the emotional content. For example, the shot where Enoch and Annie's children look at a book with Philip Ray mirrors a scene in part I where they played as children. Annie sits alone in this shot, and you know she is thinking about Enoch. Griffith then cuts to a shot of the shipwrecked Enoch and we know he is also thinking about her. Griffith is thus using the editing process to maintain a psychological link between two characters.
In the scene where Enoch watches his grown up family through the window, Griffith uses a close-up purely for emotional impact as he had done before in part I. One other thing to notice in this scene though Griffith never actually got as far as developing the point-of-view shot, and this is a very telling example. We still see the room from in front, with the window Enoch is looking in through to the left of the frame. We never see the family as Enoch does.
To conclude then, Enoch Arden is a milestone film for Griffith. Today it does look a little corny and overwrought in places (Wilfred Lucas in his old man beard reminds me of Michael Palin's "It's " man who introduced Monty Python's Flying Circus) but compared to the silly pantomime and point-and-shoot photography of many earlier films, Griffith's included, this is quite something.
Director D. W. Griffith, when he saw several Italian imports that were much longer than the standard one-reeler, realized the potential of expanding plots would be much more of an enriching experience for his audience. He had earlier produced a two-part (in essence a sequel to the first movie) motion picture, "His Trust" and "His Trust Fulfilled" which was separately played. However, the two-part film, even though having the same characters, had two different plot lines. To see "His Trust" and "His Trust Fulfilled," viewers were charged by Nnckelodean theater owners two separate times.
When Griffith's June 1911's "Enoch Arden" was released as a two-reeler, 33 minutes long, theater owners resorted to their standard practice of charging the regular price for first half, then cleared out theater. To see the second half, viewers had to pay again.
Public clamor following this procedure was so great theaters decided to charge double to see the entire movie without interruption. Biograph Studios, who funded the production of Griffith's film, recognized theater owners were profiting by charging more for viewing the movie. The studio ended up upping the rental expense for the two-reeler. "Enoch Arden" was just the start of longer movies being produced in the United States. Because of the small theaters nickelodeon owners had, there would be a demand for larger movie venues since more people were willing to stay longer even though it would cost more. The era of cramped nickelodeons was slowly drawing to a close.
On a technical note, Griffith was getting more comfortable with improving the aesthetics of his films. He directed his cameraman to get in tighter for a two-shot closeup of the husband/wife duo (photo seen below). He realized by showing a closer examination of the pair's emotions the audience would realize the tremendous love between the two before they split.
For those who are familiar with the Tom Hanks film "Castaway," the 2000 movie is quite similar to Griffith's. In fact, it appears to be a direct rip-off. "Enoch Arden" is based on the Alfred Tennyson 1864 dramatic poem of the same name. The United States has a law in the books, The Enock Arden Law, that grants a divorce or a legal exception to a person allowing individuals to remarry if his or her spouse has been absent for a number of years--usually seven--without explanation. After seven years, the missing spouse can be declared legally dead.
The basic premise of the story contains a lot of possibilities, so it is no surprise that besides the direct renderings of "Enoch Arden", both comedies like "My Favorite Wife" and dramas like "Cast Away" have been based on similar premises, and end up going in very different directions. The Cary Grant/Irene Dunne feature, for example, went for comedy, and thus started at a much different point in the story.
On the other hand, the strong point of "Cast Away" was in how Tom Hanks and the production team made his experience on the island so believable and compelling. Unfortunately, almost all of the sequences away from the island were much less believable, and too often were rather routine.
Here, the story continually switches back-and-forth, and in general it works pretty well. It would be next to impossible for a movie to convey the depths of emotions as well as a fine writer like Tennyson could do in a poem, but Griffith does well enough, especially given the limitations of cinema in 1911. Besides the parallel editing, he uses an occasional detail to help emphasize the themes and possibilities.
As for the cast, Linda Arvidson again is probably the most effective, as Annie. The two male characters are less fully developed, but things still fit together pretty well in telling the somber yet interesting story.
क्या आपको पता है
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The Amazing Road to 'Move Over, Darling' (2007)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि17 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.33 : 1