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IMDbPro

An Unseen Enemy

  • 1912
  • Not Rated
  • 17m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Lillian Gish and Dorothy Gish in An Unseen Enemy (1912)
CrimeShortThriller

A brother and his two younger sisters inherit a modest amount from their father. When the brother is away, their shady housekeeper decides to take it for herself.A brother and his two younger sisters inherit a modest amount from their father. When the brother is away, their shady housekeeper decides to take it for herself.A brother and his two younger sisters inherit a modest amount from their father. When the brother is away, their shady housekeeper decides to take it for herself.

  • Director
    • D.W. Griffith
  • Writer
    • Edward Acker
  • Stars
    • Lillian Gish
    • Dorothy Gish
    • Elmer Booth
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Writer
      • Edward Acker
    • Stars
      • Lillian Gish
      • Dorothy Gish
      • Elmer Booth
    • 15User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos15

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    Lillian Gish
    Lillian Gish
    • The Older Sister
    Dorothy Gish
    Dorothy Gish
    • The Younger Sister
    Elmer Booth
    Elmer Booth
    • The Brother
    Robert Harron
    Robert Harron
    • The Friend
    Harry Carey
    Harry Carey
    • The Thief
    Grace Henderson
    Grace Henderson
    • The Slattern Maid - the Thief's Accomplice
    Walter Miller
    Walter Miller
    • The Brother's Friend - the Car Owner
    Adolph Lestina
    • In Boardinghouse
    • (uncredited)
    Antonio Moreno
    Antonio Moreno
    • On Bridge
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • D.W. Griffith
    • Writer
      • Edward Acker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.41K
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    Featured reviews

    6springfieldrental

    Fear Factors Into The Gish's Debut Movie

    To make newcomers-to-film Gish sisters, Lillian and Dorothy, ages 19 and 14, show fear in their movie debut, September 1912's "An Unseen Enemy," Biograph director D. W. Griffith drew out his gun and chased them around the studio room, shooting into the ceiling. The ploy must have worked since what the viewer sees on the screen reflects two young girls in fear for their lives.

    The Gishes were literally brought up on the stage. With a father deserting them early on, the sisters with their mother moved from the Midwest to New York City in an attempt to elevate their theater acting. They became good friends with their next door neighbor, Gladys Smith, aka Mary Pickford. Getting modeling jobs as well as stage work, the Gishes were introduced to D. W. Griffith by Pickford in 1912. Biograph signed the two to contracts, with their first movie scheduled to be "An Unseen Enemy."

    Griffith thought they were twins when he first saw them, despite their age difference (19-year-older Lillian lied about her age being 16 at the time). On the set he tied a blue ribbon in the hair of one and a red ribbon on the other. When he wanted to direct one of them to do something, he would say, "Red, do this," or "Blue, do that."

    After humiliating the sisters with the ribbons and the firearms shooting, Pickford took Griffith aside and asked him not to treat her friends like that ever again. And he didn't.

    As for "An Unseen Enemy," the movie is almost a carbon copy of Griffith's 1909 "The Lonely Villa." Both have robberies taking place in female-only occupied houses, with the males summoned by phone miles away to come and rescue them. At this stage of his career, Griffith was becoming tired of Biograph Studios restraint on limiting the director to stick with just one reelers--about 15 minutes in length. While longer feature movies were being produced with greater frequency, Griffith would begin to search for new avenues to gain more freedom behind the camera. But "An Unseen Enemy" does show his expertise in cross-cutting with dual scenarios playing out at the same time.
    bob the moo

    Rather uneven melodrama more of note for the young cast than the actual film

    A pair of young twin sisters are in mourning for their father although they are lifted by the news that their brother, always a savvy businessman, has sold part of the estate and made them a tidy sum. This tidy sum he quickly puts in the family safe – observed only by the sisters and their slattern housekeeper. The housekeeper decides she wants this money and gets an unscrupulous acquaintance to rob the safe while she holds the girls at gunpoint through a hole in the wall (hence she is the unseen enemy). Luckily the girls are resourceful enough to use the phone to call for help and soon it is on the way – but will they get there in time?

    Having seen this described as a masterpiece by another IMDb user, I was curious about the film and decided to look it up. It was interesting to me to see that it was one of the first films from Lillian Gish and also that it had been directed by DW Griffith and I was curious how it would be. As is often the way with silent shorts, the plot is simple and in this case it is mostly a dramatic scenario where the girls are in danger and help is on the way. This is fine but mostly it doesn't work that well because the delivery is rather inconsistent. The scenario is part of the problem because the drunken hand through the wall device is odd to say the least – the girls are sort of in danger but not really and if anything it looks a bit silly; this takes away from the dramatic side. Similarly the rush to help them is at once dramatic and with lots of concerned gurning but then throws in a Keystone Cops-lite moment where they get stuck on a rotating bridge. Accordingly the musical score is uneven too as it tries to take account of the various moods.

    The performances are OK but of course of note are the Gish sisters – like Griffiths himself I don't know which is which, but the stronger performance came from the bravery of the two sisters. Otherwise the most noteworthy performance comes from Elmer Booth due to his intense overacting when he learns of the girl's plight! That said, it is an OK short film that delivers on the simple scenario – it is just very uneven and had me wishing that it had a bit more about it to increase the dramatic tension and thus my engagement in the short.
    8Steffi_P

    "They silence the children while they work"

    An Unseen Enemy is probably most notable for being the first film of the Gish sisters, Lillian and Dorothy. It's also a rather good short in its own right, being the latest in a series of increasingly adept reworkings of Griffith's trapped heroine/ride-to-the-rescue drama.

    When Griffith first met the sisters, he seems to have been attracted to the idea of casting them as endearing twins, here dressing them identically. It is actually younger sister Dorothy who is foregrounded – often literally – but Lillian's is the standout performance. She reacts convincingly and lends an air of credibility to an otherwise very hammy melodrama. The worst offender in the hammy stakes by the way is Elmer Booth, who would later give a great turn in The Musketeers of Pig Alley, but here just does the old wide-eyed-panic-in-close-up routine that is the staple of so many silent melodramas.

    In spite of the illustrious acting debut, this is still very much Griffith's show, the director having by now honed a precise formula for this type of film. The set-up is rather concise, and the action finale actually takes up around half the picture. Griffith weaves together various different strands to make a four-way crosscut, perhaps his most complex ride-to-the-rescue thus far. He also throws in various little twists to ratchet up the tension – the car being delayed by the swing bridge, the phone line going dead and, of course, that menacing gun. It may look rather corny, almost surreal in fact, but there is something very creepy about the close-up in which the gun slowly emerges through the hole in the wall.

    An Unseen Enemy is a decent Biograph short, very typical of Griffith's output around this time. Lillian Gish was clearly already one to watch, although it's worth remembering that she only had a handful of big roles in the Biograph shorts, and it was only once Griffith began making features that she emerged as his main leading lady.
    9wes-connors

    Making Movies Magical

    Great early film short, directed superbly by D.W. Griffith. In it, Lillian and Dorothy Gish play sisters (is that ever inspired casting?) terrorized by a wicked housekeeper and her male companion. They have the Gish sisters locked in a room, and terrorized them by firing a gun through a hole in the wall. It doesn't sound like much, but the direction makes in exciting (there is a race to rescue them after they are able to make a phone call).

    Lillian and Dorothy Gish look extraordinary on film, together, in "An Unseen Enemy"; though, the situation more than a little implausible. Still, the Gish sisters are radiant. Also noteworthy are the scenes with Robert Harron which open and close the drama, earning him a Kiss from Dorothy Gish. The three of them are natural actors, which Griffith (and audiences) could plainly see in this film. Great photography.

    D.W. Griffith, Lillian Gish, Dorothy Gish, Robert Harron, and G.W. Bitzer - making the screen magical in "An Unseen Enemy"...

    ********* An Unseen Enemy (9/9/12) D.W. Griffith ~ Lillian Gish, Dorothy Gish, Robert Harron, Elmer Booth
    8MissSimonetta

    Debut of the great Gish sisters

    Lillian and Dorothy Gish made their film debuts in An Unseen Enemy (1912), one of the best of DW Griffith's short film work.

    The two women show their acting chops here as two terrified teenagers cornered by villains. Their performances are not as refined as those they would give in the future, but the power and effectiveness of their pantomime and body movements forecast that well.

    I'm not the biggest fan of Griffith's features, but his shorts are amazing. He packs a lot of suspense and melodrama into one reel. The editing and pacing of these films dash the impression of early film as exclusively slow-moving and crude, an impression given off by early feature films such as the nightmarish and dull Queen ELizabeth (1912), starring theater legend Sarah Bernhardt.

    An essential for movie buffs and lovers of cinematic history.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Lillian Gish and Dorothy Gish both started working for D.W. Griffith in the early days of American Mutoscope & Biograph. While it's been claimed that Griffith was immediately infatuated with Lillian, in their first film for him, Biograph's An Unseen Enemy (1912), he thought they were twins. According to Lillian's autobiography, he had to tie different colored hair ribbons on the girls to tell them apart and give them direction: "Red, you hear a strange noise. Run to your sister. Blue, you're scared too. Look toward me, where the camera is.".
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood (1980)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 9, 1912 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • None
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El enemigo invisible
    • Filming locations
      • Fort Lee, New Jersey, USA
    • Production company
      • Biograph Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 17m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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