Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA Confederate soldier shames his mother and sister by going AWOL during battle. His sister takes his place, with tragic results, leaving him to live out his life in shame, hiding to protect ... Leggi tuttoA Confederate soldier shames his mother and sister by going AWOL during battle. His sister takes his place, with tragic results, leaving him to live out his life in shame, hiding to protect his family name.A Confederate soldier shames his mother and sister by going AWOL during battle. His sister takes his place, with tragic results, leaving him to live out his life in shame, hiding to protect his family name.
William J. Butler
- The Colored Servant
- (as W. J. Butler)
John T. Dillon
- On Porch
- (as Jack Dillon)
- …
Recensioni in evidenza
Henry B. Walthall (as Charles Randolph) goes off to fight for the Confederacy, during the Civil War. Also joining the ranks are his sister (Agnes Randolph)'s suitors - Joseph Graybill and Charles West. Later, in General Robert E. Lee's tent, soldier Walthall is chosen for an dangerous mission. But, the war, and drink, have turned him into a coward; unable to complete the mission, he runs home to mother (Grace Henderson). To save family honor, Ms. West puts on her brother's uniform to complete the mission. After receiving sad news from General Lee, mother Henderson demands cowardly Walthall hide in "The House with Closed Shutters", so folks will think he died honorably. Her plans are complicated when the sister's suitors return again, and again
and again. The two suitors certainly do persevere! Directed by D.W. Griffith.
*** The House with Closed Shutters (8/8/10) D.W. Griffith ~ Henry B. Walthall, Dorothy West, Joseph Graybill
*** The House with Closed Shutters (8/8/10) D.W. Griffith ~ Henry B. Walthall, Dorothy West, Joseph Graybill
Despite its age and the fact that the acting is overly melodramatic even by silent movie standards (it's basically a photographed stage play), this short film remains thoroughly involving and its tragic premise still has the power to grip the emotions. Definitely worth a look if you can find a copy!
The plot for "The House With Closed Shutters" has a pretty weird plot. It is set in the South during the Civil War--a topic near and dear to the director's (D.W. Griffith) heart. When the war begins, a young rich guy (Henry B. Walthall) goes off to war--which appears to be just a block from his house (though I am pretty sure Griffith expected the audience to assume otherwise). When he's given an important dispatch to deliver and Union troops shoot at him, he chickens out and runs home! His sister learns what he's done and she dons his uniform and delivers the message--and is soon killed in battle. This is odd but interesting (apart from Walthall's overacting). But when his mother then insists they must shutter up the house forever and live like Miss Havisham, this is pretty weird. Years pass and Walthall is dying to see the sunlight once again. When he throws open the shutters, he does anyone would do in this situation--he instantly dies! As I said, very weird and unfortunately the strangeness is ridiculousness of the plot prevent this from receiving a higher score--even though the film is technically quite impressive for 1910 and appears to be a warm-up for Griffith's later epic "A Birth of a Nation".
Six stars. Because the first five minutes of this 17-minute film are so
tedious. We are subject to Dorothy West prancing around her house, waving
the battle flag she has just sewn, in an absurd paroxysm of patriotic frenzy.
Then we get several minutes of various young men strutting like peacocks in their spanking new uniforms. A third of the run-time has passed, and NOTHING has happened yet!
Yeah, yeah, "scene-setting", "establishment of character", "presaging". But I watched this just after rewatching "In the Border States" (in a set of Griffith's Civil War films on the second disk of the Kino release of Birth of a Nation). And this film suffers drastically from the comparison.
Now, once the lads rush off to war, things improve. And the rest of the film gives us a really bizarre tale of honor, cowardice, and retribution. Henry Walthall (a Griffith regular) gets to toss aside the heroic convention that his status would demand, and Dorothy West gets to shine as his sister, left to deal with her brother's failure. The consequences of that failure end up turning into something out of a Poe story. I'll also give a nod to Grace Henderson, as the mother. She's the best actor in the film. I can believe everything that she shows from start to finish.
This isn't one of Griffith's better shorts. The start it too absurd and too long. But the resolution is splendidly perverse. 5 February 2025.
Then we get several minutes of various young men strutting like peacocks in their spanking new uniforms. A third of the run-time has passed, and NOTHING has happened yet!
Yeah, yeah, "scene-setting", "establishment of character", "presaging". But I watched this just after rewatching "In the Border States" (in a set of Griffith's Civil War films on the second disk of the Kino release of Birth of a Nation). And this film suffers drastically from the comparison.
Now, once the lads rush off to war, things improve. And the rest of the film gives us a really bizarre tale of honor, cowardice, and retribution. Henry Walthall (a Griffith regular) gets to toss aside the heroic convention that his status would demand, and Dorothy West gets to shine as his sister, left to deal with her brother's failure. The consequences of that failure end up turning into something out of a Poe story. I'll also give a nod to Grace Henderson, as the mother. She's the best actor in the film. I can believe everything that she shows from start to finish.
This isn't one of Griffith's better shorts. The start it too absurd and too long. But the resolution is splendidly perverse. 5 February 2025.
House with Closed Shutters, The (1910)
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Henry B. Walthall plays a Confederate solder who is sent on a mission by General Lee but he soon turns coward and returns home. Fearing the family name being disgraced, his sister (Dorothy West) takes his place and delivers the message but she is then killed. The mother then closes up the house so that their secret will not get out. This is a rather strange Civil War short from Griffith because the story is pretty wild but there's still a lot of power here. I'd be lying if I said I knew what Griffith was trying to get across here, although there's no doubt that the word coward is looked at very strongly. I'm not sure if he wanted women of the war to get more respect than they did but there's also another side to a family's shame and what they'll do to keep their name clean. The film benefits from some very strong performances with Walthall leading the way. His scenes of turning coward are very powerful as are the moments with West taking over and fighting. Grace Henderson is good as the mother and Charles West appears as well. The cinematography is once again top-notch as is the one battle sequence.
*** 1/2 (out of 4)
Henry B. Walthall plays a Confederate solder who is sent on a mission by General Lee but he soon turns coward and returns home. Fearing the family name being disgraced, his sister (Dorothy West) takes his place and delivers the message but she is then killed. The mother then closes up the house so that their secret will not get out. This is a rather strange Civil War short from Griffith because the story is pretty wild but there's still a lot of power here. I'd be lying if I said I knew what Griffith was trying to get across here, although there's no doubt that the word coward is looked at very strongly. I'm not sure if he wanted women of the war to get more respect than they did but there's also another side to a family's shame and what they'll do to keep their name clean. The film benefits from some very strong performances with Walthall leading the way. His scenes of turning coward are very powerful as are the moments with West taking over and fighting. Grace Henderson is good as the mother and Charles West appears as well. The cinematography is once again top-notch as is the one battle sequence.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIncluded in "Griffith Masterworks" DVD set released by Kino.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Making of 'The Birth of a Nation' (1998)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione17 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1
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What is the Spanish language plot outline for The House with Closed Shutters (1910)?
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