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Captain Salvation

  • 1927
  • Passed
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
371
YOUR RATING
Marceline Day and Lars Hanson in Captain Salvation (1927)
Captain Salvation Clip
Play clip2:59
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1 Video
15 Photos
DramaRomance

Seminary student helps injured prostitute, defying town's demands to expel her, jeopardizing his upcoming marriage and ministry position in that New England town.Seminary student helps injured prostitute, defying town's demands to expel her, jeopardizing his upcoming marriage and ministry position in that New England town.Seminary student helps injured prostitute, defying town's demands to expel her, jeopardizing his upcoming marriage and ministry position in that New England town.

  • Director
    • John S. Robertson
  • Writers
    • Jack Cunningham
    • Frederick William Wallace
    • John Colton
  • Stars
    • Lars Hanson
    • Marceline Day
    • Pauline Starke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    371
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John S. Robertson
    • Writers
      • Jack Cunningham
      • Frederick William Wallace
      • John Colton
    • Stars
      • Lars Hanson
      • Marceline Day
      • Pauline Starke
    • 15User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins total

    Videos1

    Captain Salvation Clip
    Clip 2:59
    Captain Salvation Clip

    Photos14

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    Top cast14

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    Lars Hanson
    Lars Hanson
    • Anson Campbell
    Marceline Day
    Marceline Day
    • Mary Phillips
    Pauline Starke
    Pauline Starke
    • Bess Morgan
    Ernest Torrence
    Ernest Torrence
    • Captain
    George Fawcett
    George Fawcett
    • Zeke Crosby
    Sam De Grasse
    Sam De Grasse
    • Peter Campbell
    • (as Sam de Grasse)
    Jay Hunt
    Jay Hunt
    • Nathan Phillips
    Eugenie Besserer
    Eugenie Besserer
    • Mrs. Buxom
    Eugenie Forde
    Eugenie Forde
    • Mrs. Bellows
    Flora Finch
    Flora Finch
    • Mrs. Snifty
    James A. Marcus
    James A. Marcus
    • Old Sea Salt
    • (as James Marcus)
    Jack Curtis
    Jack Curtis
    • First Mate of the 'Panther'
    • (uncredited)
    Louise Emmons
    Louise Emmons
    • Woman on Prison Ship
    • (uncredited)
    Dave Wengren
    • Seaman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John S. Robertson
    • Writers
      • Jack Cunningham
      • Frederick William Wallace
      • John Colton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.8371
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    Featured reviews

    9mmipyle

    It May Be A Potboiler, But It's Beautifully Done! Very Highly Recommended. Pauline Starke Gives Another Superb Performance!

    "Captain Salvation" (1927) stars Lars Hanson, Pauline Starke, Marceline Day, Ernest Torrence, and a host of fine silent character actors known well in the day, such as George Fawcett, Sam de Grasse, Flora Finch, Eugenie Besserer, and James Marcus. A seminary student - one who ardently loves the sea and ships - returns to a small town near Boston in 1840 where it is presumed that he'll soon take over the pulpit from his uncle. A ship comes into near harbor during a nor'-easter and a very bedraggled, sick, and possibly injured prostitute, Pauline Starke, is taken off of the boat and brought into the village. Here the young man of the cloth, Hanson, befriends and helps her recover, leading to what nearly looks like proclaimed damnation from the other citizens, including his fiancé, Marceline Day. Because of all this, he is later driven to take Starke to a waiting ship in harbor, where the captain, Torrence, says the ship is going to "Rio". It's not. It's a convict ship going to the far southern hemisphere where the convicts will be used in salt mines. The captain plans to "use" Starke. Hanson decides to stay on the ship to make sure she's all right. Of course she's not. The show proceeds from here, and we see many consequences of faith and lack of faith, retribution, good versus evil, and so forth.

    Extremely well done, though admittedly more a potboiler than a great parable. Still, Pauline Starke shows what a great actress she was. Torrence as the evil captain shows his chops as he did in every film he ever made. Lars Hanson does a very creditable job as the young sailor/seminary student/preacher. It is often said he rather over acts in this film, and though their are definite flashes of over-melodramatic moments on his part, he nevertheless carries off the part remarkably well. Those particular moments are moments of temporary madness, and they probably aren't far off the genuine mark.

    Superb direction by John S. Robertson, topping his superb direction in the silent classic "Dr. Jekell and Mr. Hyde" (1920), starring John Barrymore. Photography by William Daniels is equally good. Recommended highly. This is the Warner Archive release on DVD, and though it has grainy moments and several artifacts at different moments, is still very watchable and enjoyable. Philip Carli's accompanying music is quite apt and most enjoyable.

    I recently watched "The Viking" (1928) and was especially impressed by Pauline Starke's performance. She seems to have had a large reservoir of talent; most of her films, beginning with 1916's "Intolerance", were silent, and many are lost. Too bad, because she seems to have had the acting talent to rank her with the best of them who are recalled today from the silent era.
    7Patriotlad@aol.com

    An Excellent Restoration

    As was noted by Cine Tiger, this excellent silent film was offered by Turner Classic Movies on their Sunday Night Silent feature.

    "Captain Salvation" was beautifully photographed, and although it does show the difference in the movie-making of that day to this day, it was a captivating journey. Marcelline Day was simply excellent in this film. My original vote for this drama was a 6 but after reflection, I raised the vote to a 7 because some of the scenes were so very haunting.

    The newly added soundtrack for "Captain Salvation" was most enjoyable.

    Plaudits all around to the restoration team, to the music composer, and to the Turner Classic Movies channel and its executives. This was a great film to restore and it was definitely an enchanting story to view on a quiet Sunday night. This movie also gives the lie to those modern cynics who say that spiritual or religious themes in movies are passe' or "old hat." Not so. Granted, this was truly a '20s movie and the 1920's had an element of resurgent Christian fundamentalism in that era, a resurgence which contrasted so very sharply with the age of "flappers, flivvers, and fol-de-rol".

    With many other classics of the '20s awaiting restoration, we can only hope for the best and for the immediate rescue of these cultural documents from our true American history !! Let's hope TCM shows this one again and again.
    8zaarnak

    Humanist story has great contrasts

    "Captain Salvation" could have been a segment of "Intolerance." In 1840, faced with blind discrimination, unfounded gossip and strict religious judgment, Anson Campbell, a seminary student, retreats to the sea. There, through a series of unfortunate events, he is reborn to his faith, 'baptized' by the fallen woman who has enlightened him.

    Most performances are standard, but Pauline Starke's work is excellent. George Fawcett's character, Zeke, provides some of the story transitions by being around when the transitions occur. It is a critical function in silent movies too often provided by title cards alone(in talkies, by a narrator or other dialog). Generally, this picture is very smoothly directed by John Robertson.

    Cinematography by William Daniels helps this picture shine. The new orchestral score by Philip Carli (TCM induced, I think)is great.
    8mhesselius

    Provocative film about Christian ethics

    This first-rate production from MGM, effectively evoking the Victorian atmosphere and attitudes of 1840s New England, is a fine film about the redemptive power of religion that isn't at all preachy or stereotypical.

    Highlighted by sensitive performances from Lars Hansen as a divinity student, Marceline Day as his fiancée, and especially Pauline Starke as the prostitute who comes between them, this film is not a melodrama as some have described it, but treats seriously complex issues of rape and the Christian's moral duty to sinners, and shows to what desperate measures people may resort in order to achieve redemption. Without giving away too much, I will add that the way former prostitute Bess Morgan preserves her new-found virtue defies Christian orthodoxy yet defines her as a hero just the same, and demonstrates just how subtle these early non-talking films could be.
    7wes-connors

    Helping Hanson Find His Faith

    In the Spring of 1840, tall, fair and handsome Lars Hanson (as Anson Campbell) returns from seminary studies, to his little New England town. A prayerful and seafaring man, Mr. Hanson is welcomed by the folks at home, especially virginal sweetheart Marceline Day (as Mary Phillips). The pair plan to become minister and wife, but drift apart when Hanson defends Boston prostitute Pauline Starke (as Bess Morgan) against the town's wrath. He is advised, "Get that trull out of here!" But, Hanson shocks puritanical villagers by taking in the shipwrecked woman, and nursing the "Waterfront Jezebel" back to health.

    Ironically, Hanson's "Christian charity" threatens his ministry and engagement. Returning her ring, Ms. Day exclaims, the "scarlet woman is stealing your soul!" In a grand scene, Ms. Starke tells Day she should have stood by her man. Ostracized, Hanson and Starke join a ship supposedly headed for Rio. That the Captain of the "Panther" is frequently nasty Ernest Torrence should tell you smooth sailing is not in the offing. Helping Hanson find his faith is one of Starke's best roles, and she performs it beautifully. Director John Robertson, photographer William Daniels, and the crew make "Captain Salvation" exciting.

    ******* Captain Salvation (5/14/27) John S. Robertson ~ Lars Hanson, Pauline Starke, Marceline Day, Ernest Torrence

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      According to the AFI Catalog entry for this film, the three-masted, square-rigged sailing ship was named the "Santa Clara". She was built in 1876 in Bath, Maine. She ended up in San Francisco as part of the fleet of the Alaska Packers Association from 1896 to 1926, sailing yearly to participate in the salmon fishing season. After that, the Santa Clara was sold and moved to Los Angeles where it was used in the movies and possibly as a fishing barge. Sometime in the early 1930s it sank in San Pedro Harbor. Many attempts were made to salvage her, but she wasn't raised until 1964 when she was moved to a spot off of the coast of Rancho Palos Verdes and sunk on the order of the Coast Guard. For the film, the ship's crew consisted of forty Norwegian sailors, who were the only men left on the West Coast who could handle such a vessel. Filming aboard took six or seven days on Santa Catalina Island off California. The cast and crew endured three days of heavy rain and both the steam heating and plumbing system of their accommodations failed. Their only cooking facility had been reduced to one stove with soaked wood for fuel.
    • Goofs
      (at around 42 mins) When the girls are arguing on the sandy beach, the water and waves do not move right behind them, indicating that the background is a still backdrop.
    • Quotes

      Title Card: Southward sailed the 'Panther' - - out of the reach of all things known - - into seas where anything can happen...

    • Crazy credits
      With the credit of titles by John Colton, there is also added "author of 'Rain' and 'The Shanghai Gesture.'"
    • Alternate versions
      In 2005, Turner Entertainment Co. copyrighted an 87-minute version with a new musical score composed by Philip Carli.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 14, 1927 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Warner Archive (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Капитан Спасения
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Cosmopolitan Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 27 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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