Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA young couple struggle to get ahead, the wife always assuaging the troubles of her melancholy husband. As he climbs the ladder of success, he abandons the homely values and takes up with an... Leggi tuttoA young couple struggle to get ahead, the wife always assuaging the troubles of her melancholy husband. As he climbs the ladder of success, he abandons the homely values and takes up with another woman. His wife leaves him, returning to her mother's home where she bears a child. ... Leggi tuttoA young couple struggle to get ahead, the wife always assuaging the troubles of her melancholy husband. As he climbs the ladder of success, he abandons the homely values and takes up with another woman. His wife leaves him, returning to her mother's home where she bears a child. When the husband is abandoned by his concubine, remorse drives him to find his wife...
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Recensioni in evidenza
The story moves briskly, rather like a condensed version of the domestic scenes from King Vidor's much later film The Crowd. One moment Lillian is a girl playing with puppies, and the next, having married her suitor "against her better judgment," she's keeping house. No attempt is made to glamorize married life in these scenes. (Not so incidentally, director Griffith's own marriage had recently soured.) Pretty soon we are told that the husband is "turning away from the homely joys," i.e. taking his reluctant young wife to decadent nightclubs. The nightclub scenes are the closest this movie gets to those inadvertently funny moments which sometimes mar silent dramas; here, cultural decadence takes the form of a floor show featuring chubby "modern" dancers in togas and animal skins, performing what looks like Isadora Duncan's take on The Bacchae. Oh well, perhaps Griffith meant this sequence to be satirical. In any event the scene provides a light moment in an otherwise heavy story.
The husband falls into an affair -- more of a guilty fling, really -- with a buxom (i.e. wicked) woman he meets at the nightclub, while wife Lillian, who is pregnant, becomes increasingly distraught back at home. There's a striking scene when Lillian finds a woman's glove in his jacket, and realizes that her husband is drifting away. Eventually she leaves him, then gives birth to a sickly baby who soon dies. The death scene is handled with restraint, almost too much so, until the dazed Lillian wanders out into the garden, picks up a stick, and wildly thrashes all the buds off a rosebush. All these years later, this scene is still powerful. The reconciliation sequence that follows and brings the film to a close is beautifully played, and feels well earned and justified, not a contrived Happily Ever After coda tacked on to send viewers home satisfied. The Mothering Heart is indeed a satisfying experience, but it's not an easy ride.
Casting Note: actress Viola Barry (also known as Peggy Pearce) who plays the "other woman" in this film, worked at Keystone the following year and was said to be Charlie Chaplin's first girlfriend there. She played opposite Chaplin once, in His Favorite Pastime, but is seen to much better advantage here.
Gish plays a young wife whose troubled, erratic husband causes her a series of heartaches. Her characterization works very well, making the wife thoroughly sympathetic yet always believable. She shows restraint much of the time, while also giving indication of the emotions underneath, so that then the moments of emotional release are that much more effective and memorable.
Kate Bruce, as the young wife's mother, and Peggy Pearce (Viola Barry), as the wife's rival, also add their talents to the story. D.W. Griffith's technique is resourceful and solid, getting the most out of the setup.
Besides the good quality of the acting and the technique, the story also still works. Just substitute a few different details, and it provides a couple of thoughtful and sensitive insights on finding happiness at home.
'The Mothering Heart' to me is one of Griffith's best and most interesting 1910s short films, as well as one of his most poignant. 'The Mothering Heart' also has one of Gish's best early performances in my view, if anybody wants to see what the fuss is about with her her performance here is a good starting point. One can also see why it was a turning point role for her and why her career took off quite vastly after.
Gish is a revelation in a role absolutely perfect for her, she gives a very moving and warm portrayal that makes one completely root for her easily. Walter Miller is far from a drip and brings surprising complexity to a character that on paper sounded weak. Viola Barry is a scene stealer.
On top of the great performances, we also have highly effective direction from Griffith, it is always visually striking and doesn't let the momentum lag. 'The Mothering Heart' is extremely well made, especially striking is how beautifully and inventively shot it is. Far from primitive. Story is very heartfelt and easy to be charmed by, the tragedy heart-breaking.
Not all the more humorous parts gel though and like they didn't properly belong.
That one small complaint aside, this is excellent. 9/10
For the first time Griffith really liberates his camera, dispensing with the old either/or situation of three-quarter length shots and extreme close-ups. He puts his camera exactly as far from or as close to the action as it needs to be, often using multiple set-ups in the same location. This is particularly effective in the dance-hall scenes the large room becomes a real place because the camera really gets inside it. The introduction of the larger space makes it possible to show the flirtation between the husband and the "idle" woman in medium close-ups without it being confusing. The next logical step here would have been for Griffith to introduce the point-of-view shot, but unfortunately that was a step he never took. See Raoul Walsh's Regeneration for what is probably the earliest genuine point-of-view shot.
Ultimately however, all eyes are on Lillian Gish for her powerhouse performance. She works largely with props, facial expressions, and tiny gestures to convey a whole range of emotions. The fact that she does all this whilst barely moving, while incredible in itself, means that her scene of rage where she batters the rose bushes has all the more impact. The rest of the cast is rather unforgettable, and is made more so in comparison to Gish. Walter Miller, the husband, despite several years at Biograph and a number of lead roles, never really did anything outstanding. He is certainly competent here though, and this may be his finest hour, albeit one outshone by the glow of Miss Gish.
Griffith now had his heart set on directing a full length feature, and probably saw this and the other two-reelers he made in 1913 as warm-ups. Here, he reaches the pinnacle of poignant and dramatic expression in his Biograph shorts, and The Mothering Heart can be seen as something of a companion piece to The Battle of Elderbrush Gulch, in which he perfects the large scale action scenes he would need in his features.
D. W. Griffith changed all that. His films were moving towards the direction of actors expressing less with their bodies and more with their faces--hence, he was physically moving his camera in closer to his performers instead of remaining stationary on the standard wide shot.
In a leap forward in dramatizing his plot by showing the angst of his actress, Griffith had Lillian Gish in June 1913's "The Mothering Heart" break the mold of physicality by filming her acting in a subtle, restrained rendering of a pained wife and new mother dealing with a cheating husband, played by Walter Miller.
Not that such a performance hadn't been captured on celluloid before. But Gish's mannerisms throughout the movie reflected a new style of acting rarely seen on the screen up until then. The anguish she undergoes is visibly noticed in each step of her discovery her husband has been philandering behind her back. She suspects the relationship when he doesn't return home from work at his normal time, then finding hard evidence of a female's handkerchief in his pocket, then witnessing him getting into his mistress' car. At each step, Gish conveys via her face and body language deep hurt. As a true, strong woman, she is able to take decisive steps to counter her husband's infidelity, all the while refraining from uncontrollable gestures (except for a brief wild release of emotions at the outdoor plants) normally captured in early film of actors in similar situations.
The cinematic world took notice of Gish's performance in "The Mothering Heart," and from this point onwards, silent movie actors began to taper their excessive movements and learn how to express their innermost feelings by facial expressions.
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- ConnessioniFeatured in American Masters: Lillian Gish: The Actor's Life for Me (1988)
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- Tempo di esecuzione29 minuti
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- 1.33 : 1