LizzieMaine
Bartender
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
lol
I think I might have the same movie recorded and never watched. I've recently been going through my unwatched DVDs and came across this one. I put it in the pile to watch. I've been putting it off -- I find most full-length movies from this time period (1912-1916ish) to be unwatchable.
It's that whole tableau style that i find tiring -- a title card explains what's happening, and then you see the actors all lined up in a medium shot acting out what was described. And then on to the next scene and on and on for five reels. Plus -- and it amazed me to realize this -- there isn't a single closeup in the whole picture. Griffith had been doing closeups for five or six years by this time, so it's not like they were unknown -- I would have expected DeMille to at least have some awareness of how to do them and why they were important, even at this early stage.
There's some good things about the movie, though -- Farnum, for all his doughiness, is a pretty subtle actor, given the limitations of the technique and the material, and the Indian actress who plays his wife, Red Wing, aka Lillian St. Cyr, is also good, even though she mostly just gets to suffer nobly.