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IMDbPro

Annie Laurie

  • 1927
  • 1 h 30 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
568
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Lillian Gish in Annie Laurie (1927)
Aventura épicaAventura na montanhaDrama de épocaDrama históricoDrama políticoÉpicoDramaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe story of the famous battle between the Scots clans of Macdonald and Campbell, and the young woman who comes between them, Annie Laurie.The story of the famous battle between the Scots clans of Macdonald and Campbell, and the young woman who comes between them, Annie Laurie.The story of the famous battle between the Scots clans of Macdonald and Campbell, and the young woman who comes between them, Annie Laurie.

  • Direção
    • John S. Robertson
  • Roteiristas
    • Josephine Lovett
    • Marian Ainslee
    • Ruth Cummings
  • Artistas
    • Lillian Gish
    • Norman Kerry
    • Creighton Hale
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,7/10
    568
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • John S. Robertson
    • Roteiristas
      • Josephine Lovett
      • Marian Ainslee
      • Ruth Cummings
    • Artistas
      • Lillian Gish
      • Norman Kerry
      • Creighton Hale
    • 9Avaliações de usuários
    • 2Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 vitórias no total

    Fotos66

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    Editar
    Lillian Gish
    Lillian Gish
    • Annie Laurie
    Norman Kerry
    Norman Kerry
    • Ian MacDonald
    Creighton Hale
    Creighton Hale
    • Donald
    Joseph Striker
    Joseph Striker
    • Alastair
    Hobart Bosworth
    Hobart Bosworth
    • The MacDonald Chieftain
    Patricia Avery
    Patricia Avery
    • Enid
    Russell Simpson
    Russell Simpson
    • Sandy
    Brandon Hurst
    Brandon Hurst
    • The Campbell Chieftain
    David Torrence
    David Torrence
    • Sir Robert Laurie
    Frank Currier
    Frank Currier
    • Cameron of Lochiel
    Richard Alexander
    Richard Alexander
    • One of the MacDonalds
    • (não creditado)
    Mary Gordon
    Mary Gordon
    • First Midwife
    • (não creditado)
    Carmencita Johnson
    Carmencita Johnson
    • Baby
    • (não creditado)
    Margaret Jones
    • Village Child
    • (não creditado)
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • King's Representative
    • (não creditado)
    Margaret Mann
    Margaret Mann
    • Second Midwife
    • (não creditado)
    Tom O'Brien
    Tom O'Brien
    • One of the Campbells
    • (não creditado)
    Carl 'Major' Roup
    Carl 'Major' Roup
    • Blonde Haired MacDonald Boy
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • John S. Robertson
    • Roteiristas
      • Josephine Lovett
      • Marian Ainslee
      • Ruth Cummings
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários9

    6,7568
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8boblipton

    Fine Restoration

    The restoration of this movie had its Turner Classic Movies premiere, and I have spent a pleasant couple of hours looking at it. It stars Lillian Gish as Annie Laurie ... but it is more accurate to say that it co-stars Miss Gish and Norman Kerry as Ian MacDonald in one of those I-love-you-I-hate-you plots that was often used while some minor event was taking place, like World War II or the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, to give the movie a little gravitas. Here it's the Massacre of Glencoe, laid here entirely to the perfidy of the Campbells, led by Hobart Bosworth. Look it up if you care to know what it was. In this movie it's an excuse for a bang-up battle sequence at the very end, made possible by Miss Gish being shot, but still scrambling to the top of a hill with a bloodthirsty highlander close behind her, trying to stop her setting alight the signal that will call the the MacDonalds to save their embattled chieftain. Will she succeed? Will the lovers survive for a final two-strip Technicolor sequence?

    Miss Gish decried her comedic abilities as "Funny as a barrel of dead babies", but she has a very funny sequence, in which, as mistress of her father's house, she is very full of herself as she prepares the place for a peace meeting between the clans. At other times she runs through her gamut of serious emotions, and does very well with them, thank you. Kerry is boisterous and charming in the early part of the movie, trying to buckle his swashes (whatever those are) like Fairbanks or Milton Sills. The rest of it has the usual late-silent players -- Creighton Hale, Patricia Avery, and Russell Simpson playing their parts very well. Although it appears to have been shot entirely on sets, director John S. Robinson does an impeccable job. Alas, it didn't do well at the box office.

    I should mention Robert Israel's score, full of traditional Scottish airs and occasional bagpipes. He shows a dab hand at his job, as might be expected, with the title tune occasionally bringing a tear to my eye, and not just in pain at hearing the pipes.
    8wes-connors

    Lillian Gish Goes the Distance

    Hundreds of years ago, two Scottish clans feud in the highlands surrounding their neighboring castles. These families are led by patriarchal chieftains Hobart Bosworth (as MacDonald) and Brandon Hurst (as Campbell). Their sons and subjects raid each other's cattle, kill an occasional serf, and take their women by force. Our heroine, lovely Lillian Gish (as Annie Laurie), is aligned with the Campbell clan not only by blood, but also through best friend Patricia Avery (as Enid Campbell). Ms. Gish has caught the eye of arrogant cousin Creighton Hale (as Donald Campbell), but exchanges more passionate glances with bigger, brawnier rival Norman Kerry (as Ian MacDonald). With his broad shoulders and big grin, Mr. Kerry brutishly arouses Gish...

    The family feud heats up when the MacDonald clan abducts Ms. Avery, as part of a revenge attack. A truce is reached, but Avery shocks all parties by announcing she has fallen in love with handsome abductor Joseph Striker (as Alastair MacDonald). When Gish seems likely to follow cousin Avery into the arms of another rough and ready MacDonald, Mr. Hale plots the Campbell clan's final solution to the age-old family feud. This leads to a thrilling last act, with Gish trying to stop a massacre…

    MGM made "Annie Laurie" a blockbuster for their high-prestige star, which turned out to be one in a series of miscalculations in handling Lillian Gish. On balance, her final silent films had to be considered, at the time, a modest success; still, the bottom line was money, and too much was being spent for too little. This expensively made film lost a bundle.

    "Annie Laurie" hasn't achieved the classic status now afforded other Gish fare from this era, like "The Scarlet Letter (1926) and "The Wind" (1928); importantly, both were directed by Victor Sjöström. Another reason is that Gish became a spokesperson for silent films, and decided against promoting certain films. Her efforts had an unquestionably positive effect on film preservation, overall, but she left a few jewels behind. "Annie Laurie" isn't thematically up to Gish-Sjöström levels, but it's an excellent example of silent cinema. Director John S. Robertson, who was considered one of the best directors available in the 1920s, turns in some of his finest work. The castle massacre, frantic mountain chase, and Technicolor finale are exceptional.

    ******** Annie Laurie (5/11/27) John S. Robertson ~ Lillian Gish, Norman Kerry, Creighton Hale, Hobart Bosworth
    6psteier

    Men in kilts

    Lillian Gish plays Annie Laurie, who's father tryies to mediate the feud between the MacDonalds and Campbells in mid eighteenth century Scotland. Annie Laurie falls in love with Ian MacDonald, son of the MacDonald chieftain and ends up in the middle of a treacherous massacre by the Campbells.

    Made in the grand Hollywood style, some of the action sequences are well done, but nothing to go out of the way for.
    9EauDouce

    What a score

    I saw this film at the Hippodrome Festival of Silent Cinema with a specially commissioned live score by Shona Mooney that was so mind- blowingly good that it's hard to separate out the film itself from the combined experience. However that's silent films I suppose, they are new each time in a way that talkies aren't. Although I've just had the best night out at the cinema for a long time, the film as a stand-alone item isn't perfect. That said it's pretty damn good and, note, one of those ones where you'd be foolish to decide whether to go and see it based on a You Tube clip. Like a Scott novel, you might dip into it and think it ludicrously antiquated, but accept its own rhythms and logic and you get hooked. The film really is Annie Laurie, it's her (Gish) and not any of the men who is the pivot, who makes the important choices good and bad, deals with the consequences, drives the narrative and has a full physical part in the very well-done and action-packed finale. It's funny at times, romantic or suspenseful at others.

    The music though, in the performance I saw: simply stunning, and the best live film score I've experienced. The performers were, appropriately, Scottish traditional musicians and aside from being good music, pure and simple, the score was pitch perfect at every point in interpreting and enhancing the action. As one small example, one of the film's big problems, for a modern audience, is that the male love interest Ian MacGregor (this is the old story of the Campbells and the MacGregors leading up to Glencoe) is hard to take seriously. Unlike the character of his brother, who gets the 'other' girl and could probably pass muster in a current Hollywood film in a Paul Rudd kind of way, the way Kerry plays Ian, and the way his character looks, are just not what we are conditioned to expect and initially seem comic. However Mooney's music believes in him, just as Annie Laurie does, and it's the music that, building up to a climactic and decisive mid-river kiss, made us feel the moment as Annie Laurie does and, at that point and thereafter, buy into the deal that she does.

    Even a ridiculous Hollywood postscript comes, rather nicely, in colour when all else is in black and white; whatever the actual explanation, it felt like a cool, self-subverting marker that we'd shifted realities, and made for a great close - reminded me of a similar effect from the extending of the aspect ratio in Dolan's Mommy - which I'd recently seen.

    All in all, go to see Annie Laurie at any point, but if you get a chance to see it with the Shona Mooney score (the HippFest audience were told it would be touring at least to the Barbican in London), you should go considerably out of your way not to miss it.
    TheCapsuleCritic

    First Class Restoration Of A Once Lost Lillian Gish Movie.

    By the time she made ANNIE LAURIE in 1927, Lillian Gish was 33 years old and had appeared in over 20 feature films and more than 40 shorts. It was her third movie for MGM after LA BOHEME & THE SCARLET LETTER, both of which were moderately successful. MGM at that time was the biggest, most powerful studio in Hollywood. Studio head Louis B. Mayer didn't like Gish because she was allowed more autonomy than most female stars (initially she had script approval and could choose her director) but as long as her movies made money, he left her alone. However ANNIE was an expensive flop, and that, coupled with the arrival of Greta Garbo assured Lillian's days at MGM would be numbered. After 3 more poorly performing movies (including the highly acclaimed THE WIND), Gish left Hollywood for 10 years.

    It's hard to fathom why ANNIE failed at the box office at the time of its release. The film took its name from a well known ballad and was based on an actual historical event. Joining Gish were popular 1920s leading man Norman Kerry (PHANTOM OF THE OPERA) along with silent film veterans Brandon Hurst and Hobart Bosworth as the leaders of the rival clans. Also in the cast, in an atypical role, was Creighton Hale who was known for his comedic roles like in THE CAT AND THE CANARY. Here Hale portrays the chief villain and he's very good. The movie also had lavish production values as can be seen in the massive castle sets and in the hundreds of extras clothed in traditional Scottish dress (lots and lots of kilts representing the different clans).

    The plot concerns two warring clans, the Campbells and the MacDonalds in 17th century Scotland. Gish portrays the title character who is the daughter of a diplomat trying to initiate peace between the two families. She commits herself to a Campbell but then falls for a MacDonald. When her jilted boyfriend plans a gruesome revenge upon the opposing family, Annie must risk her life to warn them before it is too late. The circumstances are based on the Glencoe Massacre which occurred February 13, 1692. While this event has been fictionalized and romanticized, it actually did happen. The attack is rousingly staged and is definitely the action highlight of the film. The final scene of the movie was shot in two-strip Technicolor which added to the expense.

    After the movie tanked, MGM "forgot" about it (as they did all 4 of Gish's movies made there) and it disappeared for almost 60 years and was considered lost. In the 1980s a print was located in Oregon and turned over to the American Film Institute who sent it to the Library of Congress. The film was in less than pristine condition but at least it was preserved. After a number of years, restoration efforts began and the fully restored version, complete with a brand new full orchestral score, premiered in January of 2024. The music by Robert Israel is a medley of familiar Scottish tunes including the titular one which was the initial inspiration for the movie. It is this restored version that has now been made available on Blu-ray by Kino Lorber.

    ANNIE LAURIE, while not top drawer Gish, still has lots of things going for it. It's a delight to look at with superbly detailed sets and excellent location shooting beautifully captured by longtime MGM cinematographer Oliver Marsh. The underrated Norman Kerry is both handsome and rugged but, as mentioned earlier, acting honors belong to Creighton Hale. Lillian is good as always but seems less at home in the lighter scenes. She does come to life during the dramatic finale which was more her mien. From my POV, the action sequences have been transferred a trifle fast but the LOC should know what it's doing. The ending Technicolor scenes do look good. While it's great to have ANNIE LAURIE, I'm still waiting for a restored Version of THE WIND...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.

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    Você sabia?

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    • Curiosidades
      The movie's finale, 304 feet in length, was filmed in two-strip Technicolor.
    • Erros de gravação
      When Annie Laurie places the baby on Enid's chest, it's obvious that it is a doll.
    • Citações

      Annie Laurie: Come along - don't stand there glamoozlin'.

    • Versões alternativas
      By 1927, Lillian Gish was one of the biggest stars in Hollywood. She had been making films for 15 years, beginning as the protégé of D.W. Griffith, starring in his groundbreaking production such as Is the birth of a nation and intolerance. Gish parted ways with Griffith and made Annie Laurie (1927) after signing a new contract with MGM Studio. Of all the studios in Hollywood, MGM was one of the few that carefully preserved its existing silent films, but Annie Laurie was not among them. For decades, this film was considered lost. Then, in the 1970s, the American Film Institute acquired a copy --- the only known 35mm nitrate copy of the domestic version. The film was almost complete, but it was not in pristine condition. It was deposited at the Library of Congress where it's been preserved and recently restored, including its original two-color Technicolor ending, and a new score by Robert Israel.

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 11 de maio de 1927 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Nenhum
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Anna Laurie
    • Locações de filme
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

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    • Orçamento
      • US$ 916.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 30 min(90 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • Silent
    • Proporção
      • 1.33 : 1

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