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IMDbPro

Morane le marin

Original title: Moran of the Lady Letty
  • 1922
  • Passed
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
388
YOUR RATING
Emilius Jorgensen and Walter Long in Morane le marin (1922)
Adventure

A milquetoast young man of society toughens up once he's shanghaied and falls for the captain's tomboy daughter.A milquetoast young man of society toughens up once he's shanghaied and falls for the captain's tomboy daughter.A milquetoast young man of society toughens up once he's shanghaied and falls for the captain's tomboy daughter.

  • Director
    • George Melford
  • Writers
    • Monte M. Katterjohn
    • Frank Norris
  • Stars
    • Dorothy Dalton
    • Rudolph Valentino
    • Charles Brinley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    388
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Melford
    • Writers
      • Monte M. Katterjohn
      • Frank Norris
    • Stars
      • Dorothy Dalton
      • Rudolph Valentino
      • Charles Brinley
    • 17User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast12

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    Dorothy Dalton
    Dorothy Dalton
    • Moran
    Rudolph Valentino
    Rudolph Valentino
    • Ramon Laredo
    Charles Brinley
    Charles Brinley
    • Captain Eilert Sternersen
    Walter Long
    Walter Long
    • Captain 'Slippery' Kitchell
    Emilius Jorgensen
    • Nels Larsen
    Maude Wayne
    Maude Wayne
    • Josephine Herrick
    • (as Maud Wayne)
    Cecil Holland
    Cecil Holland
    • Bill Trim
    George Kuwa
    • 'Chopstick' Charlie
    William Boyd
    William Boyd
    • Ramon's Friend at Homecoming
    • (uncredited)
    Charles K. French
    Charles K. French
    • Tavern Owner
    • (uncredited)
    George O'Brien
    George O'Brien
    • Deck Hand
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Stevens
    Charles Stevens
    • Seaman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • George Melford
    • Writers
      • Monte M. Katterjohn
      • Frank Norris
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.4388
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    Featured reviews

    henri sauvage

    Fast-Paced Visual Treat

    Valentino does a quite creditable job of portraying a bored San Francisco society swell, whose life is turned upside down when he gets shanghaied by a villainous arms smuggler. His performance is refreshingly naturalistic (for a silent) as he discovers unexpected pleasure in his rough-and-tumble life as a smuggler -- at least, until the more sinister side of his captain's nature emerges. Walter Long makes a good heavy, and Dorothy Dalton is passable as the love interest.

    What captivated me, though, were the locations: That harbor chock-full of tall ships, just at the end of the era of commercial viability for sail. And especially the two merchant ships on which most of the action takes place. When you see a sailing ship in a movie it's usually a replica of a warship from the 18th Century or earlier. I found those little details of actual workhorse merchant vessels from the late 1800s/early 1900s -- the zenith of commercial sailing -- fascinating.

    For instance, there's a pretty authentic sequence in which the Lady Letty's cargo of coal spontaneously combusts -- a bad enough prospect when you're at sea, but much, much worse when you're at sea on something as inflammable as a ship constructed out of very dry wood. After the captain and a couple of men are overcome by fumes while trying to fight the fire, the remaining crew panics and abandons ship, leaving the captain's daughter behind, easy prey for vultures like Capt. "Slippery" Kitchell.

    Whether you're a seafaring history buff or not, this is still an entertaining example of an action film from the heyday of the silents, and for my taste one of Rudolph Valentino's most watchable performances.
    7pocca

    Little known but worthwhile Valentino film

    A fast paced seafaring tale featuring Rudolph Valentino as Ramon Laredo, a bored socialite who finds his manhood and a sense of purpose only after being shanghaied. Initially he is such a coddled dude that he drinks something called a "Mild Manhattan", but soon after being forced to serve as a deckhand he transforms into an extremely capable sailor( looking quite contemporary in jeans and a dark pullover) and earns the respect of the rugged crewmen who once dismissed him as a "soft thing." Eventually his path crosses with that of Letty Moran (Dorothy Dalton), a tomboyish captain's daughter. The two actually met briefly before, on land, where she was as almost as contemptuous of the city slicker in his yachting outfit as the crewmen once were. However, although she is initially as tough as Ramon is effete, the situation reverses itself once Ramon rescues her from her father's ship whose hold has caught fire. Although Ramon is impressed by her strength of body and purpose, Letty, in tandem with Ramon's growing masculinity, becomes more and more womanly as the film progresses, allowing herself to be assisted out of boats (perhaps not so much because she's suddenly helpless as that she's glad someone is finally recognizing her as female) and becoming clothes conscious enough to replace her trousers with a dress, albeit a rather plain and no-nonsense one. (In contrast, Ramon indifferently allows his swanky white bell bottoms to become muddier and muddier.) These character changes culminate when Ramon saves Letty from his nemesis Captain Kitchell, played by Walter Long (who costarred in The Sheik and once again plays a character with unsavoury designs on Rudy's woman).

    Entertaining, but in retrospect a bit depressing in that the ridicule Ramon undergoes as a ballroom dancing, tea sipping dandy mirrors all too closely the vicious powder puff slurs the real life Valentino tried to refute practically until the end of his short life.
    7movingpicturegal

    The Odd Couple Meet in Rousing Tale at Sea

    On the sailing vessel the Lady Letty, we meet Moran (Dorothy Dalton), a Norwegian tomboy, reared as a seaman, who wears pants and works the ship right alongside the men. In San Francisco on Nob Hill lives rich and handsome Ramon (Valentino), idol of the débutantes, who spends his time throwing house parties and sailing on yachts. One day he's late for one of his yacht parties and gets himself shanghaied by a ship full of sea-outlaws. Forced to become Second Mate on a voyage headed towards Mexico, Ramon seems to take a shine to being shipboard and changes rapidly from dandy to able-bodied seaman, and before you know it he's happily swabbing the decks and looking gorgeous in white sleeveless t-shirt. Meanwhile, sailing in the same waters is the Lady Letty which suddenly catches on fire, and the outlaws go aboard to loot it, coming back with nothing but rum and a "loco sailor" - actually Moran dressed as a boy, brought over by Ramon who tries to keep her hidden away from the evil Captain. Now Ramon seems to develop a crush on Moran, but this may not work out for him - see, she wishes she were born a boy!

    This film is packed with lots of shipboard action, fights, etc. - a bit too much for my taste actually. There is also a plot element that seems a little odd to me and that is the fact that Ramon seems so happy being on the ship with bad men who kidnapped him and are committing crimes. I am also not sure I like the match between Valentino and the woman, I kind of like them better as just "mates". The mainly sepia-tinted print shown on TCM looked okay, a tiny bit washed-out here and there but pretty good as a whole, and featured an excellent music score that matched the action well. For me, Valentino is the main reason to see this - he looks stunningly handsome in all of his scenes - sigh! I like Dorothy Dalton too, well cast in her tomboy part. Worth seeing for the beauty of Valentino alone.
    10craig_smith9

    Love and Action - An Unbeatable Combination

    He was rich. She was not. He had no goals, no ambitions, no cares. Yet he recognizes that he is missing something. She sails the oceans and knows how to work and enjoys what she does. Then Ramon is shanghaied. There he learns to work and how to fight. In the process he admits to being the happiest he has ever been. Then through a series of misfortunes the Lady Letty is taken by the smugglers and Moran is taken as a prisoner. Ramon becomes her protector and to care for her. Finally Moran comes to care for Ramon. Then the question--what happens when they return to port?

    Like so many good movies there are many levels to this one. It is a well crafted movie that moves at a strong pace yet goes beyond being just a love story and an action movie. It is also a very good study in what is important in life. This is definitely a movie that can be enjoyed more than once.

    Finally, Rudolph Valentino is excellent as an action actor. The climax is loaded with exciting action!
    7bkoganbing

    Rudy gets Shanghaied

    Rudolph Valentino's name would not for long be beneath another player's as it is in Moran Of The Lady Letty. Dorothy Dalton is first billed in this film which casts Rudy as a young playboy who gets Shanghaied aboard a modern day pirate ship skippered by Walter Long.

    He's quite the pampered one Rudy is, but some experience with this crew and their evil skipper is enough to toughen anyone up. Later on sound successors to the Valentino image like Robert Taylor and Tyrone Power both of whom did sound remakes of Valentino roles were also deliberately given action material like this to broaden their appeal.

    Even without sound Valentino's charisma comes through over 90 years after this film was released. Walter Long who played many a brutish, thuggish villainous role is at his best doing his thing in this film.

    Moran Of The Lady Letty is a good introduction to the films of and the legend that was Rudolph Valentino.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The character played by Rudolph Valentino was called "Ross Wilbur" in the novel by Frank Norris on which the film was based, but the name was changed to "Ramon Laredo" for the film to accommodate Valentino's non-American appearance.
    • Crazy credits
      Except for Dorothy Dalton, whose name appears on the title frame, actors were not credited in this movie at the start or at the end. Instead, 7 additional actors and their character names are credited in the intertitles right before they appear onscreen and are listed in the same order in the IMDb cast. All other actors are marked uncredited.
    • Alternate versions
      In 2006, Flicker Valley copyrighted a 68-minute version with a musical score by 'Robert Israel (II)'. The source material was from the Daniel J. Bursik collection. New intertitles were used, which may have changed some of the actors' names. In the New York Times review of 6 February, 1922, for example, Valentino's given name is listed as "Rodolf."
    • Connections
      Referenced in Un voyage à Paramount-Ville (1922)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 5, 1922 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • None
    • Also known as
      • Moran of the Lady Letty
    • Filming locations
      • San Francisco, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Famous Players-Lasky Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 8m(68 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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