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21 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
A Tale of Two Orphans, 12 April 2002
Author:
lugonian from Kissimmee, Florida
"Orphans of the Storm" (United Artists, 1921), directed by D.W.
Griffith, is a grand scale silent melodrama, by 1920s standards anyway,
with the central characters being two young sisters (Lillian and
Dorothy Gish) in a story that is divided into two parts. The first
half, set prior to the French Revolution, is taken from the old play,
"The Two Orphans" by Adolphe Dennery. The second half, lifted from
Charles Dickens' "A Tale of Two Cities," takes place during the French
Revolution, given the added excitement to a suspenseful climax in the
Griffith tradition.
Part I of the story opens with the killing of a commoner. The slain
man's wife is revealed to be the daughter of an aristocratic family who
feel she was injudiciously married. They decide to take the infant
child from her and leave it on the steps of Notre Dame Cathedral in the
dead of winter where she might get picked up and adopted by some
kind-hearted soul, with a note attached that reads, "Her name is
Louise. Save Her." Later, as the snow continues to fall, a
poverty-stricken father named Jean Girard, arrives to leave his own
baby, Henriette, to the cathedral steps. After noticing the shivering
infant Louise, Girard realizes that he cannot bring himself to do the
same for his own child, so he decides to bring home both babies. After
returning home to his wife with the babies, Girard encounters a purse
full of money left with Louise. With this money, the Girard's rise
above their poverty-stricken background and raise the two girls happily
in a northern providence. Years pass. A plague comes, killing both
parents, and blinding Louise (Dorothy Gish). Henriette (Lillian Gish),
her sister and guide, accompanies her blind sister to Paris in the hope
of locating a famous doctor who may be able to restore her sight. On
their way, they attract the attention of Marquis de Praille (Morgan
Wallace), a nobleman, who becomes so interested in Henriette that he
arranges to have her kidnapped upon the arrival in Paris and brought to
a lavish party given that night at his great estate, thus, leaving the
blind Louise to roam the streets of Paris alone, until she is taken in
by Pierre (Frank Puglia). But as fate would have it, Pierre has an old
hag of a mother, Frochard (Lucille LaVerne), who decides to use the
blind girl by having her sing and beg in the streets for money. At
first Louise refuses, but after being left alone in a room surrounded
by rats, she agrees to do her bidding. As for Henriette, she escapes
the estate of De Praille with the aide of Chevalier de Vaudrey (Josef
Schildkraut), an aristocrat who not only pities her, but agrees to help
her search for Louise. During the search, Henriette falls in love with
Chevalier, who, in turn, happens to be the nephew of Louise's birth
mother (Catherine Emmett), still mourning for the loss of her child of
long ago, now the wife of the famous count, who is unaware of his
wife's secret past. PART II of the story continues to focus on
Henriette's search for Louise and her encounter with Chevalier. After
learning of Louise's whereabouts and being victim of the evil Mother
Frochard, she locates the old hag who tells her that her sister has
"died." But as Henriette gets closer to learning the truth and finding
Louise, something always intervenes to prevent their reunion,
especially the riot and outbreak of the French Revolution, having the
aristocrats arrested, sentenced and executed by the one and only
guillotine, with the innocent Henriette taken in to become one of those
tortured victims.
"Orphans of the Storm" ranks one of the best of the DW Griffith
silents, and one that should still hold interest throughout,
particularly its story that plays liked a chaptered serial. Of all the
supporting players, which range from Monte Blue, Sheldon Lewis,
Creighton Hale, Louis Wolheim and Kate Bruce, Lucille LaVerne as the
mean old hag named Mother Frochard, old clothes, uncombed hair and some
missing front teeth, is the most memorable because of her natural
meanness. One scene comes to mind is the one when, after forcing the
blind Louise to beg on the streets as the snow falls around her, Mother
Frochard decides to take the shawl away from her, feeling that the more
she shivers, the more money she will collect. LaVerne would play a
similar character in appearance in the 1935 MGM version of "A Tale of
Two Cities" starring Ronald Colman. LaVerne leaves a lasting legacy
playing old hags, especially during French Revolutionary times. Another
memorable performance given in this production is by Leslie King (who
sometimes resembles Boris Karloff), playing a character named Jacques
Forget-Not, an unforgiving sort who avenges those aristocrats who
tortured his poor father by sending them to their execution.
In spite of some flaws, and there are several, particularly a couple of
unrelated scenes and unnecessary added comedy relief that distract from
a viewer's attention, whose main focal point is on the two orphans,
there are memorable scenes along with lavish background scenery and
costumes that are an added bonus in capturing the flavor of 18th
century Paris.
"Orphans of the Storm" was one of 13 silent features shown on public
television's 1971 presentation of THE SILENT YEARS, as hosted by Orson
Welles, with an original and excellent piano score accompanied by
William Perry, the print that was formerly used in the BLACKHAWK VIDEO
collection back in the 1980s, and the one currently seen when aired on
Turner Classic Movie's SILENT Sunday NIGHTS. A new copy, available by
KINO video, features a new (but very unsatisfying) music score, clearer
picture and a longer length of 150 minutes. In spite of which version
to see, "Orphans of the Storm" still ranks one of the best silents
produced by the Griffith company shortly before the great director's
decline. (****)
24 out of 31 people found the following review useful:
A Great Accomplishment, 29 October 2001
Author:
dave gersztyn from Warren Mi.
I sometimes feel that people who are not sympathetic to the silent era and
its genre should not view or comment on them.
As a long-time maven of silent films, I have no problem placing myself in
that era and enjoying these movies on their own terms. Much has changed
since those days, and most folks simply cannot appreciate the simplicity
AND
complexity of photoplays without words.
This film is magnificent and entertaining. I am not a fan of most "period
pieces", but this transcends the typical fare. Check it
out.
13 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Silent Spectacle, 26 October 2004
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Author:
Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
Two ORPHANS OF THE STORM caused by the French Revolution desperately
search for each other in the violent chaos of Paris.
History's sweeping drama comes alive in this powerful epic film from
legendary silent movie genius D. W. Griffith. Although much happens on
a broad canvas, the director never loses sight of the intimate details
of the heroines' pitiful plight. In denouncing tyranny, Griffith always
manages to keep the viewer engrossed in how the State's insidious evil
affects the individual.
Much of the film's success is due to the remarkable acting of the Gish
Sisters, Lillian & Dorothy. Acclaimed for her comedic talents, Dorothy
here gives an almost completely serious performance, portraying a blind
girl cruelly separated from her beloved sister and forced to beg in the
streets. Lillian, her classic face mirroring a myriad of emotions,
plays the sibling persecuted by both lecherous aristocrats and
rapacious revolutionaries. The scene in which Lillian, in an upper
chamber, hears Dorothy singing in the alley below but is unable to
reach her, is almost unbearable in its emotional intensity.
A young Joseph Schildkraut plays Lillian's blue-blooded suitor, giving
the viewer an intimation of the very fine character actor he would
become with the advent of talking pictures. Lucille LaVerne steals more
than a few scenes as the filthy harridan who enslaves and terrorizes
Dorothy. Frank Puglia makes a poignant mark as Miss LaVerne's pathetic,
downtrodden son. Comic actor Creighton Hale gives a lively performance
in a small role as a mischievous, periwiged servant.
A fascinating aspect of the film is its vivid rendering of two
historical characters of great significance in the history of France.
Georges Danton was probably not as noble as he is portrayed by Monte
Blue, nor was Maximilien Robespierre necessarily as evil as Sidney
Herbert depicts him. What is certain is that both men were responsible
for the deaths of thousands of individuals during the Reign of Terror.
Fittingly, each man had his own rendezvous with Madame Le Guillotine in
1794.
Movie mavens will recognize an unbilled Louis Wolheim as the
executioner awaiting Miss Lillian on the scaffold.
Griffith handles the sequences involving surging masses of extras with
admirable dexterity. He also freely borrows a few plot elements from
Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities. In fact Miss LaVerne, with scarcely a
costume change, would play the role of The Vengeance in MGM's 1935
version of that classic, violent novel.
13 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Lavish Epic Romance, 29 December 2002
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Author:
Shelly_Servo3000 from Sun Prairie, WI
D.W. Griffith loved epic stories full of dangerous situations and damsels in
distress. With the beautiful and talented Gish sisters, he got two damsels
for the price of one. "Orphans of the Storm" is probably the most beautiful
of all Griffith features. The lavish detailing of the sets is much better
than "Intolerance" or "Broken Blossoms" and the costumes are magnificent. By
this time in Griffith's career, his direction was already beginning to
become stale and his plots too old-fashioned, but somehow he makes "Orphans"
work to his advantage.
Lillian Gish is Henriette Girard and her sister Dorothy plays her "Sister"
Louise. The amazing Joseph Schildkraut plays de Vaudrey, a nobleman who
truly is noble. The "storm" in the title refers to the French Revolution,
which is the background this story of family and romantic love plays itself
upon.
As usual, Lillian Gish is wonderful in her role as the devoted sister
Henriette; but it is Dorothy Gish as blind sister Louise who is truly the
star of the film. Her performance drips with the pathos, pain, and longing
that most people associate with her older sister. Schildkraut shines in
this, his first Hollywood film role.
The frequent ridiculous scenes (Danton running to save Henriette from the
executioner's blade?) and length of the film will turn most modern viewers
off; but those who have a love of history, epic spectacle, and the timeless
beauty of the Gish sisters will enjoy "Orphans of the Storm".
11 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
DW Griffith storyteller extraordinaire., 3 September 2002
Author:
dbdumonteil
Adolphe D'Ennery's novel was one of those countless melodramatic
maudlin stories which were thriving in France of the 19th century. DW
Griffith decided to transpose the action just before and after French
revolution.The novel was rather reactionary and its historical
background was thin and vague.
But Griffith's vision of the French Revolution is naive,to put it
mildly.He was not apparently aware that the 1789 events were mainly a
bourgeois move,and the poor were only a tool.The dichotomy Good
Danton/Wicked Robespierre should make people who are looking for a sort
of historical accuracy have a look at Wajda"s "Danton"(with
G.Depardieu,in the eighties).
Forget history and you have a two-hour and a half silent movie with
never a dull moment.Griffith is a wonderful storyteller,who had a great
respect for his audience.Some sequences are still impressive today:the
aristocratic orgy,when the Poor are starving at the gates of the palace
is far from D'Ennery's timid depiction of the scene in the book;Lillian
Gish,a wonderful actress who 'd been part of the cinema till the
eighties,is so powerful in her part of the abducted maiden Henriette we
can almost hear her when she screams out of despair:"is there a man of
honor among you?Louise and the shrew who got her under her thumb
begging in front of the cathedral as the snow is falling is a splendid
picture,recalling a painter's work;even if Danton's coming to the
rescue of a soon-to-be guillotined Henriette is thoroughly
implausible,we cannot help but admire the director's maestria.
Few silent movies have stood the test of time as well as this one.
10 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
A masterpiece from one of the great innovators of early cinema, 27 September 2000
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Author:
jsl72 from Manhattan, U.S.A.
First of all, I find it desperately necessary to remind the viewer of
silent
movies of the danger of analyzing these pieces under the lens of the
modern
cinemagoer. The aesthetic values of silent cinema are incommensurable
with
the values of modern cinema. Aside from the obvious difference that one
relies purely on image while the other has the benefit of sound, we must
also not forget that the cinema of the silent era is cinema in its
infancy,
in a constant state of the most early self-discovery (which is not to say
that cinema has necessarily "grown up" or "progressed" into our modern
era;
our cinema today is only different than the cinema of the silent era,
neither better nor worse.) Basically, we should check ourselves before we
ridicule these films on the basis of irising, masking, et cetera and
ESPECIALLY the exaggerated emotion and overblown gesturing of the actors.
The conventions of the art of acting have, of course, their basis in that
of
the theatre, which preceded film, and where emphatic gesturing and
stressed
emotion was conventional in conveying story even to those seated in the
back
row.
All editorializing aside, Griffith's _Orphans of the Storm_ is a shining
example of the director's masterful grasp of narrative cinema. The story
is
almost Dickensian in its feel, from its very beginning alternating between
no less than five separate subplots, all of which become inextricably
intertwined before the backdrop of the larger plot of the impending
revolution in France. The acting performances are not, in fact,
excessively
overplayed, but are actually quite subtle and touching, especially those
of
the two orphans, the Gish sisters.
The visuals are stunning: the costumes and decor are lush and the
recreation
of late 18th century Paris is excellent. Most impressive to me is
Griffith's expert command of montage, primarily through intercutting, in
creating a engrossing story that, while complex in structure, is easily
grasped. The film starts out on wobbly legs, but soon breaks into a
steady
gallop, raging through the glorious revolution to an admittedly
predictable,
yet satisfying conclusion. A grand achievement for one of the titans of
early cinema: I give it a 9/10.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Visually impressive melodrama is wildly overacted but still compelling to watch..., 24 November 2008
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Author:
Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
ORPHANS OF THE STORM is quite an impressive looking silent film from
D.W. Griffith, who was obviously the Cecil B. DeMille of his day. He
has an instinct for showing surging crowd scenes involving all the
unrest during the French Revolution and these scenes are highly
detailed and very arresting visually. All the sets and costumes look as
though a lavish budget was spent on this story of two sisters who
survive the French Revolution after many melodramatic twists and turns
of their fortune.
DOROTHY GISH and LILLIAN GISH are the sisters, with Dorothy as the
blind waif who is separated from her sister when an overly amorous
nobleman orders Lillian to be brought to his orgy. From there on, the
Dickensian plot becomes thicker and thicker as the girls suffer one
indignity after another in order to survive.
LUCILLE LaVERNE is the old hag (she later was the model for Disney's
Wicked Witch in "Snow White"), a harridan who makes Dorothy a beggar in
the streets. "You'll shiver better without a shawl," is one of her
immortal lines.
Joseph SCHILDKRAUT is very impressive in an early American screen role,
demonstrating charm and skill of the kind that would land him important
parts in future costume films like "Marie Antoinette." MONTE BLUE is
Danton, a man who meets LILLIAN GISH early in the story and later
becomes the defender who saves her and Schildkraut from the guillotine.
It's all very melodramatic, the acting ranging from overdone to wildly
overdone. Griffith was never subtle in asking his performers to give it
their all. Excessive wringing of hands, eye-rolling to show anguish,
fierce looks to show hatred, etc. may cause unintended chuckles when
viewed by today's audiences, but there is never any letdown in the
telling of a compelling story using the French Revolution as rich
background material for a tale of villainy and heroism.
A fascinating silent film with an appropriate film score added to give
the story even more force and flavor.
Summing up: Overlong drama, but compelling from the start to the
feverishly melodramatic end.
Exquisite close-ups of Lillian Gish are touching and lend poignant
charm to her performance.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Often Exciting, Often Moving, & A Triumph For the Gish Sisters, 21 September 2004
Author:
Snow Leopard from Ohio
The story is often exciting and often moving, yet the chance to see
Lillian and Dorothy Gish together might be the best reason of all to
watch Griffith's silent classic, "Orphans of the Storm". The story
combines the tumultuous backdrop of the French Revolution with a
worthwhile melodrama involving the ordeals of two sisters who are
practically alone in the world.
The French Revolution used to be a frequent setting for some fine films
- between the ideas involved and the upheavals that it brought, it's
almost ready-made for cinema. Here, as the two sisters, Lillian and
Dorothy are struggling to help each other when they are caught up in
the turmoil around them, and they find themselves involved with
everyone from the lowest classes of society up to some of the
best-known personalities of the Revolution.
The historical background is often stylized, and it is mainly there to
lend drama to the story about the sisters, rather than to provide an
accurate look at history. The characterizations of some of the
revolutionary leaders are interesting, but they are not always
accurate. Yet from a purely dramatic viewpoint it works well. The
involved story, along with the personal appeal of Gish sisters, combine
to win the audience's sympathy quickly, and to heighten the tension as
the story plays out. It's a well-acted and memorable melodrama.
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
The French Revolution for Ninnies, 14 March 2006
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Author:
Picador66 from Maine
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I love Lillian Gish and I enjoy silent pictures, but this movie is just plain silly. It's two stories in one and each manages to cancel out the other. I'm a sucker for a good weepy, sentimental potboiler. This one starts off good but it takes forever to come to its inevitable sappy ending because the French Revolution keeps butting in and spoiling everything. The effect is quite comical. It seems criminal to go to such lengths to re-create a great event in history only to burlesque it in the service of a contrived melodrama. (The same crime was repeated by the makers of TITANIC many decades later.) The last minute race to the gallows is more of the same hokum that cheapened INTOLERANCE. The movie leaves you with the feeling that the entire Revolution just sort of blew over and the cleansing spirit of DEMOCRACY made everyone live happily ever after. What about Napoleon?
5 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Lillian and Dorothy Gish. Beauty and Chemistry at its finest, 20 April 2005
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Author:
crushingday7 (crushingday7@aol.com) from New York
A true classic. This silent era movie (1921) is not only a film historians dream, but is enjoyable for all generations of film fans. D.W Griffith was known for his bold faced way at voicing his opinions through films. I have never seen such a great show of emotions than with the Gish Sisters. I don't think anyone has ever been able to match Lillian's facial expressions and the way she uses the absence of sound to her advantage. A tremendous story unfolds before the viewer that leads to a riveting conclusion that will etch this film into your mind and heart forever. Also appearing in this film is the great actor Monte Blue, who was a great leading man in many films. .
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