A lonely young woman lives with her strict father who forbids her to wear make-up. One day at an ice cream social, she meets a young man you seems interested in her. However, unknown to her,... Read allA lonely young woman lives with her strict father who forbids her to wear make-up. One day at an ice cream social, she meets a young man you seems interested in her. However, unknown to her, he is a burglar who is only interested in breaking into her father's house. One night she... Read allA lonely young woman lives with her strict father who forbids her to wear make-up. One day at an ice cream social, she meets a young man you seems interested in her. However, unknown to her, he is a burglar who is only interested in breaking into her father's house. One night she is awakened by a noise. Grabbing a pistol, she enters her father's downstairs office wher... Read all
- At Ice Cream Festival
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- At Ice Cream Festival
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- Little Girl in Arbor
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- Belle at Ice Cream Festival
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- Belle at Ice Cream Festival
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- Hired Hand
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- Beau at Ice Cream Festival
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- Boy with Dog
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- At Ice Cream Festival
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- At Ice Cream Festival
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Featured reviews
Thanks to Blanche Sweet, the main character is mostly convincing. Sweet plays an older sister who wants to resist becoming a "Painted Lady", and much of the story revolves around issues that likely were more topical at the time than they would be now (or, at least, the issues involved would be much different in another era). That in part makes it of less interest than many other dramas of the time.
There are some good touches to the story, as in practically any Griffith short, and it holds your attention. But in the end, the movie leaves you feeling rather confused - it's hard to figure out what he was trying to say - and it's not one of his best.
I recognized some later stars as well in bit parts, including Lillian and Dorothy Gish, Bobby Harron, and Harry Cary, and of course Kate Bruce is always effective in Griffith's short films, even in small roles like this one. Hers is really the last face we see in this poignant film as the camera fades.
The story is a little too scattered and the message is dated; this is a case where I actually wished for one or two (or three of more) title cards to show certain moments of dialog. The main core of the story is understood as that Sweet is a young woman who doesn't wear make-up (the story description here says her father forbids it, but I got the sense that she just doesn't like it, or doesn't conform). She goes out to some fair and she doesn't get as much attention as the other men.
But she does get into a conversation with one man and it appears he likes her for who she is... that is until it's revealed he's a burglar (what?) and breaks into her home. She doesn't know it's the same guy since he has a mask, she shoots him (sort of by accident), and when she discovers it she's sad. And then the rest of the movie is... her being even sadder. Was she traumatized by killing him? She then has fantasies of meeting someone who isn't there. And then at the end of the story she, uh, puts on make-up. Is it supposed to be a warning to women to put on make-up, to conform? Or is it a story where it's more personal, that this particular person didn't conform to societies standards of beauty and paid a personal price?
There's a hysterical undercurrent (and I mean that not in the funny way but in the old-time way that the word was used with women), and I'm not sure if this holds up very well. I was with the short at first as it was detailing a simple premise, and then it lost me a bit with the burglar component (I also didn't know her father was supposed to be a rich man or whatnot). Things like this make such a silent short dated despite the fact that Griffith's storytelling as director, as much as it's a mightily flawed story, is terrific and he has a great lead. It goes to show that even in 1912 if you haven't got a coherent story, you haven't got anything, all the technical prowess and fine acting besides.
This is a film about madness and isolation. Griffith demonstrates that isolation in a crowd shot early on. As opposed to the rather cluttered and confusing crowd scenes of Griffith's earliest works, the focus here is very clear. Blanche Sweet literally stands out from the crowd, a passive and solitary figure against a backdrop of much activity and excitement. Later, he repeatedly uses the very plain bridge location which forces us to focus totally upon her.
Although the Painted Lady does contain an action sequence of the kind that might normally be the climax of a Biograph short, Griffith instead makes it the catalyst for the final act. He doesn't dwell on it, and so it doesn't overwhelm the second half of the film. The slowness of the final scenes forms a balance with the first half, and they have a greater impact as a result.
Prior to this, while the acting in Griffith's shorts was becoming increasingly naturalistic, his actors still often slipped into over-the-top pantomiming when their characters' emotions ran high. Here however, in a picture that has a lot of scope for melodrama with its murder and madness, Sweet surprisingly manages to keep it relatively real. Importantly Griffith also encourages a deep performance from her by doing very long takes of her madness scenes.
The Painted Lady has aged better than most Griffith pictures, and is still very effective today mainly thanks to Blanche Sweet's acting. It goes to show that the depiction of a deranged loner unable to connect with society goes back a lot further than Travis Bickle.
In "The Painted Lady" The Older Sister (Blanche Sweet) eschewed make-up while The Younger Sister (Madge Kirby) had all the boys in the yard by virtue of her liberally using her war paint. But not all of the men flocked to The Younger Sister. At least one man, The Stranger (Joseph Graybill), was attracted to The Older Sister. Too bad his aims were criminal in nature. He was using the Older Sister as a means to get access to her father's business secrets.
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Details
- Runtime12 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1