The frothy experiences of a vain little flapper. Her father induces an actor friend to become a gentlemanly cave man and the film becomes another variation of the 'Taming of the Shrew' theme... Read allThe frothy experiences of a vain little flapper. Her father induces an actor friend to become a gentlemanly cave man and the film becomes another variation of the 'Taming of the Shrew' theme.The frothy experiences of a vain little flapper. Her father induces an actor friend to become a gentlemanly cave man and the film becomes another variation of the 'Taming of the Shrew' theme.
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Had it gone along those lines, it would have been palatable, only to a certain extent. The basic idea of having your daughter, that too a head-strong one, fall in love with someone, you don't intend her to hitch with, is quite strange.
However even if one tends to forget that, ther rest of the movie had been a complete drag.
The Lioness-tamer had been well coached by the father, and had even been introduced as misogynist. He might not have been one, but he was asked to be one, a la Petruchio, to tame her. But was there any hint of that? Even once in the movie? The girl had been associated with the door-mat admirers, on whom she would stomp at her wish. At that moment she already had six of them, the Harvard Seniors, and this added a number to that and became the seventh door-mat, and remained so till the end. It just inexplicable on how she fell in love, if one goes on the logic that was being advocated.
Naturally I won't have liked it, if the women was shown to be doormat or even violated, as in the Bard's play. But the girl, romantic, and having her own way with all the men around, including her father, needed some one who at least sometime be tough, take stand against and not follow the wish of her little finger. The hero's character was definitely not having a single of those qualities. In the end she says she is tamed, but was she? I doubt. Once the 'Honeymoon' was over, she would have been back to her colours, since till the end, every one did, and acquiesced to what SHE wanted.. When she shooed him off, he he went, with proverbial tail between his legs, till she whistled him back.
Only plus factor was Marion's looks, but that can't really make an incoherent movie watchable.
This is a hum-drum romantic comedy, with no surprises, predictable developments, slight humor, decent acting, and interesting interior sets. The film plods along at a barely acceptable pace, but then comes to a complete stop when the two leads appear in a production of "Sleeping Beauty." Instead of cutting to the climax of the production, which brings the desired results between Davies and Stanley, we are subjected to the entire story of Sleeping Beauty - which will indeed put you to sleep. In fact, the only chuckle I had was when Davies and Stanley get passionate when Sleeping Beauty awakens, and the camera pans to the audience. Most of them seem aghast at the display of spontaneous affection, except for Mr. Hoyt (well-played by Tom Lewis), who is sound asleep.
Davies is cute, but her character is annoying, and her outfits are atrocious. Harvey is adequate as the romantic lead, but looks ridiculous in his Prince Charming outfit.
Edith Shayne, as Mrs. Hoyt, is very attractive at the outset of the film, and could easily have played a romantic lead herself:
If the modern film fan is aware of Marion Davies at all, he thinks of her as the no-talent mistress of William Randolph Hearst, whose money and power sustained a career for her. In actuality, Miss Davies was an able actress, whose abilities were often thwarted by Mr. Hearst's insistence on important movies. Her talents lay as a light comedian. In this movie, she gets to do some light comedy and is excellent. This film was rated as one of the best of the year -- by competitors of the Hearst papers.
For one thing, this is a technically advanced picture for 1921; this would not be so clear to most modern viewers, but visually and in terms of story-telling, it would have been a good picture four years later, during a period of rapid evolution. Ira Morgan's camera-work is solid and the editing is brisk. The cast is surprisingly good under the direction of Robert Vignola, who rarely rose about adequate. The story is amusing and Miss Davies alternates between realistic screen acting and Delsartian posing when she wishes to fool other people.
Most interesting is the provenance of the copy I saw: Ed Lorusso ran it as a Kickstarter project and had the Library of Congress make a copy of their print. Although there is some major decomposition halfway through, most of the print is sharp and beautiful, making this more than usually watchable; also, Donald Sosin has provided a light, impromptu-sounding score that matches the movie perfectly.
Copies were distributed to the Kickstarter backers, but Ed may still has some for sale at $25 each. It's a bit high for 93-year-old movie, but if you have an interest in these things, it's definitely worth your time and money. Send Ed an email at drednm@yahoo.com.
October 9, 2015: Ed informs me that this fine movie is now available from Amazon, on DVD and via Amazon Streaming.
"Enchantment" is a very well-produced silent. The available print looks great. Thanks to restoration producer Edward Lorusso for helping bring the film to light. Director Robert G. Vignola and Ira H. Morgan give it an appropriately boxed-in look. They frame the richly detailed sets well. The film outwears its welcome by the time everything stops for a longish performance of "The Sleeping Beauty", but it helps (artistically). Contributing nicely are title cards by Grace Waller and a new musical score, by Donald Sosin, which captures the film and era perfectly. Davies is appealing and performs amusingly as the young teenage flapper. The art/set direction by Joseph Urban is lovely and, of course, Marion is even lovelier.
******* Enchantment (10/30/21) Robert G. Vignola ~ Marion Davies, Forrest Stanley, Tom Lewis, Edith Shayne
Marion Davies does not show much of what later made her famous.
Did you know
- TriviaGenerally considered to be the first American film to extensively use Art Deco designs for sets. Designer Joseph Urban was hired by producer William Randolph Hearst specifically to work on the films of Marion Davies.
- Quotes
Opening Title Card: What is more amusing or more charming than a girl at the flapper age? That egotistical youth so gloriously confident of never being conquered... so all-wise... so tolerant of the last dull generation of grown ups...
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1