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.The story of the famous battle between the Scots clans of Macdonald and Campbell, and the young woman who comes between them, Annie Laurie.
- Awards
- 3 wins total
Richard Alexander
- One of the MacDonalds
- (uncredited)
Mary Gordon
- First Midwife
- (uncredited)
Carmencita Johnson
- Baby
- (uncredited)
Margaret Jones
- Village Child
- (uncredited)
Henry Kolker
- King's Representative
- (uncredited)
Margaret Mann
- Second Midwife
- (uncredited)
Tom O'Brien
- One of the Campbells
- (uncredited)
Carl 'Major' Roup
- Blonde Haired MacDonald Boy
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
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.
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.
A copy of this film was recently found and restored by the U.S. Library of Congress. It is well written, directed, acted and filmed. It is about the need to end cycles of vendettas and the courage required to say that you will not allow the cycle of death and hatred to continue. It is about the fact that humans by nature are loving and that only a perverse heart hates indefinitely. This is a story about courage and the cowardice of people who misuse power to their own petty ends.
Some dangerous stunts from a time in which leads did their own stunt work. Miss Gish's fall down a mountain face might not have been as dangerous as jumping around on ice flows as in Way Down East. Yet it reminds us of a time when actors no only did their own stunts in uncontrolled environments but COULD ACT as well!
Some dangerous stunts from a time in which leads did their own stunt work. Miss Gish's fall down a mountain face might not have been as dangerous as jumping around on ice flows as in Way Down East. Yet it reminds us of a time when actors no only did their own stunts in uncontrolled environments but COULD ACT as well!
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.
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.
"Annie Laurie" was just posted to YouTube a few days ago. However, after watching it, I really wish I'd waited and perhaps seen it elsewhere. I noticed in one of the reviews, EauDouce marveled at the experience of seeing the film with a live orchestra and on the big screen. Well, my experience was quite underwhelming and I think that whoever copied it, literally snuck a video camera into a theater or held it up to a video recorder and copied the movie that way! No music, a poor print AND periodically the camera fell down and the person duping it had to set it up once again! Crazy.
From what I could see of the film, it was a decent silent epic, though I have seen better. My feeling is that the film was a bit slow and relied a lot on guys repeating Scottish poetry.
The story is about the feud between two Scottish clans, the Campbells and the MacDonald's. Why exactly they hate each other is unknown but what is known is that the leaders of the Campbells is an effete and duplicitous jerk-face. Although the king has ordered and end to the feud and has promised to restore the lands to the MacDonalds, the Campbells haven't told the MacDonalds about this or the king's threat to whichever clan refused to sign a peace treaty.
As for Annie Laurie (Lillian Gish), she's a Campbell but has fallen for an ultra-manly man. When she learns of her clan leader's evil plans, she risks her life to aid the MacDonalds and save her beloved.
The film seemed slow and could have been better. However, the copy was so horrid. As I said above, if you really insist on seeing it, try to see if you can get a different copy or, better yet, see if it's playing in some theater.
From what I could see of the film, it was a decent silent epic, though I have seen better. My feeling is that the film was a bit slow and relied a lot on guys repeating Scottish poetry.
The story is about the feud between two Scottish clans, the Campbells and the MacDonald's. Why exactly they hate each other is unknown but what is known is that the leaders of the Campbells is an effete and duplicitous jerk-face. Although the king has ordered and end to the feud and has promised to restore the lands to the MacDonalds, the Campbells haven't told the MacDonalds about this or the king's threat to whichever clan refused to sign a peace treaty.
As for Annie Laurie (Lillian Gish), she's a Campbell but has fallen for an ultra-manly man. When she learns of her clan leader's evil plans, she risks her life to aid the MacDonalds and save her beloved.
The film seemed slow and could have been better. However, the copy was so horrid. As I said above, if you really insist on seeing it, try to see if you can get a different copy or, better yet, see if it's playing in some theater.
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.
Made in the grand Hollywood style, some of the action sequences are well done, but nothing to go out of the way for.
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie's finale, 304 feet in length, was filmed in two-strip Technicolor.
- GoofsWhen Annie Laurie places the baby on Enid's chest, it's obvious that it is a doll.
- Quotes
Annie Laurie: Come along - don't stand there glamoozlin'.
- Alternate versionsBy 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 Le signal de feu (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.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Annie Laurie
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $916,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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