A down-at-heal ex-convict undergoes an epiphany as he experiences the love of a good woman for the first time.A down-at-heal ex-convict undergoes an epiphany as he experiences the love of a good woman for the first time.A down-at-heal ex-convict undergoes an epiphany as he experiences the love of a good woman for the first time.
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Did you know
- TriviaThe verse novel "The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke" by C.J. Dennis was published in 1915.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Forgotten Cinema: The Golden Age of Australian Motion Pictures (1967)
Featured review
How does this film stand up to compariosn with the other films of its day?
It does not do, in my view, to worship at he altar of conventional cinema historiography (grossly US-centred for the most part. Nor should one imagine something magical in a litany of names (D. W. Griffith, Maurice Tourneur, Victor Sjöström) simply because of the "canonical" view that these film-makers are "auteurs", a fatuous (and largely meaningless) term that means undue attention is based even to the poor films made by such directors at the expense of rather good films by directors who have not been awarded the same (entirely spurious) title or whose films do not fit neatly into the "standard" (again, largely US-centred) view of cinema history. Longford's. The Sentimental Bloke is quite evidently fated to be too often a casualty of both these typical critical prejudices.
Free oneself from these notions and one can see without difficulty that The Sentimental Bloke has many virtues lacking in the great majority of films of the period (those of Griffith, Tourneur and even to some extent of Sjöström quite as much as those by the many, many lesser lights.
1) First, very simply, it is a quite different sort of film from most of its contemporaries and stands out by virtue of its very individual character. It is not the only film by any means to have been made from a poem; this was quite common practice especially in the early years of cinema, but it tended to be a rather weak genre because of the thinness of the material. The Sentimental Bloke is far and away the best of the bunch (which include several very mediocre Griffith films and Sjöström's rather laborious Terje Vigen, based on an Ibsen poem, which came out just two years before this). A more striking difference still, is that, despite the ironic title,it is almost completely lacking in the kind of sentimentality and melodrama that tends to be the bane of films of this period. Compared for instance with Tourneur's Pride of the Clan (a very run-of-the-mill Pickford melodrama of 1917) or Griffith's rather maudlin Broken Blossoms, which came out in the same year, this Australian film really has a freshness and zing, even a certain pleasing cynicism, to it that those other films cannot boast. Not to mention the nauseatingly sentimental Griffith films A Romance of Happy Valley and Trueheart Susie, which both came out in 1919, or the dire series of war-propaganda films that Griffith and Pickford both turned out in 1918-1919. Or indeed DeMille's rather bizarre 1919 version of the James Barrie play, The Admirable Crichton (Male and Female). Whatever the US' technical advantages (overstated when compared with the far superior German film industry of the time),it compensated for negatively, then as now, by sheer bad taste in terms of content.
2. A second very strong plus of this film, despite its light-hearted nature, is its naturalism, not just in the acting style but more importantly in its subject-matter (the everyday lives of ordinary folk( and in its very effective location-shooting. Naturalism, then as now, was almost unknown in US film although it would come during the twenties to have a strong place in European film. It is quite interesting to note that both this Australian film and the equally marginalised Back to God's Country by Canadian director Nell Shipman (also 1919) in neither case slavishly follow US lines, as one might have expected them to do, but both have a much less restrictive style, with plenty of depth and context to the cinematography more typical of contemporary European films (compare for instance the relatively claustrophobic studio-bound feel,despite its colonial setting, of Tourneur's Victory in this same year, one of his most conventional, US-style films).
3. The film, like the poem, bristles with a fine self-deprecating irony. To treat its characters and their apparent behaviour at first degree (when everything about the film is clearly at second degree) is to totally misread it. Yes, there is a quite deliberate degree of "stereotyping" but these stereotypes are continually being ridiculed and undermined throughout the film. The poem is quite the opposite of vulgar outback-horseplay; it is a very sophisticated and witty piece of work that turns everything Australian inside-out. And I think the film does a very good job of conveying that. And the manner in which it faithfully reflects the rhythm of the original (and this is a vital but generally neglected aspect of filming a poem) is really most unusual and very remarkable. De Grasse's US film The Old Swimmin' Hole of 1921 attempts something similar but is not nearly such a good film.
Most people have described the film's "charm" and it i impossible to avoid the word when talking about it. It is immensely charming and stands out immediately from any list of the plays of the year precisely because it is so different from the others. And yet it was a strong year for film. Less so perhaps in the increasingly convention-bound US; the best US film of the year by quite a margin is Von Stroheim's Blind Husbands; European films, on the other hand, are much more varied and powerful (Lubitsch' Madame DuBarry, Gance's J'Accuse, Dreyer's Praesidenten, Holger-Madsen's Mod Lyset, Oswald's Anders als die Andern, Lang's Hara Kiri - a list to which one could go on adding). Even so this Australian film has a great deal to recommend it. It remains one of the most distinctive films of the year and, while this may be something of a sideways compliment, it remains quite the best Australian film I have personally ever seen.
Free oneself from these notions and one can see without difficulty that The Sentimental Bloke has many virtues lacking in the great majority of films of the period (those of Griffith, Tourneur and even to some extent of Sjöström quite as much as those by the many, many lesser lights.
1) First, very simply, it is a quite different sort of film from most of its contemporaries and stands out by virtue of its very individual character. It is not the only film by any means to have been made from a poem; this was quite common practice especially in the early years of cinema, but it tended to be a rather weak genre because of the thinness of the material. The Sentimental Bloke is far and away the best of the bunch (which include several very mediocre Griffith films and Sjöström's rather laborious Terje Vigen, based on an Ibsen poem, which came out just two years before this). A more striking difference still, is that, despite the ironic title,it is almost completely lacking in the kind of sentimentality and melodrama that tends to be the bane of films of this period. Compared for instance with Tourneur's Pride of the Clan (a very run-of-the-mill Pickford melodrama of 1917) or Griffith's rather maudlin Broken Blossoms, which came out in the same year, this Australian film really has a freshness and zing, even a certain pleasing cynicism, to it that those other films cannot boast. Not to mention the nauseatingly sentimental Griffith films A Romance of Happy Valley and Trueheart Susie, which both came out in 1919, or the dire series of war-propaganda films that Griffith and Pickford both turned out in 1918-1919. Or indeed DeMille's rather bizarre 1919 version of the James Barrie play, The Admirable Crichton (Male and Female). Whatever the US' technical advantages (overstated when compared with the far superior German film industry of the time),it compensated for negatively, then as now, by sheer bad taste in terms of content.
2. A second very strong plus of this film, despite its light-hearted nature, is its naturalism, not just in the acting style but more importantly in its subject-matter (the everyday lives of ordinary folk( and in its very effective location-shooting. Naturalism, then as now, was almost unknown in US film although it would come during the twenties to have a strong place in European film. It is quite interesting to note that both this Australian film and the equally marginalised Back to God's Country by Canadian director Nell Shipman (also 1919) in neither case slavishly follow US lines, as one might have expected them to do, but both have a much less restrictive style, with plenty of depth and context to the cinematography more typical of contemporary European films (compare for instance the relatively claustrophobic studio-bound feel,despite its colonial setting, of Tourneur's Victory in this same year, one of his most conventional, US-style films).
3. The film, like the poem, bristles with a fine self-deprecating irony. To treat its characters and their apparent behaviour at first degree (when everything about the film is clearly at second degree) is to totally misread it. Yes, there is a quite deliberate degree of "stereotyping" but these stereotypes are continually being ridiculed and undermined throughout the film. The poem is quite the opposite of vulgar outback-horseplay; it is a very sophisticated and witty piece of work that turns everything Australian inside-out. And I think the film does a very good job of conveying that. And the manner in which it faithfully reflects the rhythm of the original (and this is a vital but generally neglected aspect of filming a poem) is really most unusual and very remarkable. De Grasse's US film The Old Swimmin' Hole of 1921 attempts something similar but is not nearly such a good film.
Most people have described the film's "charm" and it i impossible to avoid the word when talking about it. It is immensely charming and stands out immediately from any list of the plays of the year precisely because it is so different from the others. And yet it was a strong year for film. Less so perhaps in the increasingly convention-bound US; the best US film of the year by quite a margin is Von Stroheim's Blind Husbands; European films, on the other hand, are much more varied and powerful (Lubitsch' Madame DuBarry, Gance's J'Accuse, Dreyer's Praesidenten, Holger-Madsen's Mod Lyset, Oswald's Anders als die Andern, Lang's Hara Kiri - a list to which one could go on adding). Even so this Australian film has a great deal to recommend it. It remains one of the most distinctive films of the year and, while this may be something of a sideways compliment, it remains quite the best Australian film I have personally ever seen.
helpful•20
- kekseksa
- Oct 23, 2015
Details
- Release date
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- Also known as
- Сентиментальный парень
- Filming locations
- Adelaide, South Australia, Australia(shots of sunsets & sunrises for the intertitles)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $160
- Runtime1 hour 46 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Sentimental Bloke (1919) officially released in Canada in English?
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