Jimmy Carter, a millionaire, leading an idle, indulgent life, gets an urgent message from his friend, Reginald Travers. Travers, who is dying, has been ruined in the stock market by Mortimer... Read allJimmy Carter, a millionaire, leading an idle, indulgent life, gets an urgent message from his friend, Reginald Travers. Travers, who is dying, has been ruined in the stock market by Mortimer Reynolds, and penniless, he leaves his little daughter in care of Carter, who promises fa... Read allJimmy Carter, a millionaire, leading an idle, indulgent life, gets an urgent message from his friend, Reginald Travers. Travers, who is dying, has been ruined in the stock market by Mortimer Reynolds, and penniless, he leaves his little daughter in care of Carter, who promises faithfully to look after her. After the death of Travers, Carter takes Ruth to his luxurious... Read all
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One of his features was "The Innocence of Ruth". This 1916 work stars Collins's wife Viola Dana as an orphan who becomes the ward of her father's rich friend. Although it's not the the most captivating plot, the good acting and direction make it a watchable production.
I found the movie on Wikipedia. It's good to know that some of these early relics of cinema are still available, especially since so many have gotten lost over the years. While it's not any sort of masterpiece, it's still interesting to see, if only as a look into a career cut short by a pandemic (it makes one wonder how many COVID victims could've become great artists or scientists).
I wonder if the US president sharing the male character's name ever saw the movie.
But at heart it's the story of an orphaned girl and her complicated relationship with her guardian (Edward Earle) and how they fall into the dark schemes of a ruthless financier (Augustus Phillips) who goes broke.
Directed by John H. Collins (Dana's husband) who also directed Dana in films like BLUE JEANS and THE COSSACK WHIP. This film is less sensational and deals with the assumptions of those who think there's something gong on between the guard and his ward.
Terrific music score by David Drazin.
However, what goes around comes around, and Phillips feels the Wall Street wolves closing in on him. He devises a plan to drive a wedge between the lovers and make Miss Dana his, by telling her she is living on Earle's charity.
It's one of the movies by the forgotten power couple of 1910s films, director John H. Collins and his wife, Miss Dana. It's far more conventional and less flashy than many of their movies of the period, like the high melodrama BLUE JEANS, but it certainly shows a stronger and surer hand in the editing than would become common for several years. Collins is not afraid to cut rapidly between individuals to increase tension, nor hold the camera on a performer doing an act with a pantomime horse, or Miss Dana dancing to a contemporary song. If a couple of plot points remain obscure to me -- how did Earle know to arrive at Phillips' home at that exact moment? -- it's washed away in the vivacity of Miss Dana's performance, and that final freeze frame that ends the movie. That's a technique I don't recall seeing again in films until more than forty years later.
The copy I looked at was made available from the Library of Congress by Ed Lorusso. Ed has now rescued a baker's dozen of silent features from just this side of lost. He has been running Kickstarter programs, and rewarding his backers with dvds of the films; often, they've shown up on TCM, or been made available through other, slightly more commercial publishers. Donald Drazin has provided a score that you rarely notice while the film is running, that sounds just right for a film released in 1916, with Joplin-style rags, Fox Trots, and quotes from contemporary songs.
This is not a great movie, but it is a solid and entertaining one for the year it was made, and reveals a little more of poorly understood era of film making. I look forward to Ed's next project: you mailed them all out by Monday, and here it is, Tuesday evening, and no announcement. What are you waiting for?
Did you know
- TriviaProduced for video by Edward Lorusso in 2019.
Details
- Runtime59 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1