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2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
North and South and a Family Representing Each Are Dramatically Intertwined, 31 October 2011
Author:
briantaves from Washington, DC
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Only one of producer Thomas Ince's Regal releases for P.D.C. bore his
name, Barbara Frietchie, which entered theaters to acclaim. Del Andrews
had begun preparations on the venerable property in September 1923.
Barbara Frietchie is an ode to America and its history, opening in 1620
with the disembarking of the Pilgrims from the Mayflower. A series of
tableaux leads through the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, the
opening of the west, up to President Lincoln. Some of these scenes are
from previous films Ince had made or now owned.
At Frederickstown, Maryland, home of the Frietchies, the father, a
veteran of the Mexican War, raises the flag of the United States every
day. Yet he and daughter Barbara also regard themselves as Southerners
first. For Florence Vidor in the title role, Barbara Frietchie offers
another magnificent lead provided by Ince. The Fitch play, from John
Greenleaf Whittier's poem, had been inspired by a real person, who was
actually an elderly woman at the time of the Civil War.
Brother Arthur Frietchie (Charles Delaney) and his friend William
Turnbull (Edmund Lowe) are returning from their West Point graduation.
No sooner has William made his long-planned proposal of marriage to
Barbara than news arrives of the declaration of war, sundering the
nation and the couple. Her family supports the secessionists, while he
will fight for the Union, and Colonel Frietchie (Emmett King) takes
down the American flag. Hence the conflict of the Civil War in Barbara
Frietchie analogously divides one nation and family.
A year later, William returns leading the Yankee forces attacking the
outnumbered Confederates in Frederickstown. From the Frietchie home the
battle resembles a fireworks display, appropriate considering that the
underlying seriousness of the war has barely begun to be felt. Despite
her father's objection, Barbara and William plan to wed the next day in
Hagerstown.
Again the war separates the couple, however, for that very town is to
be the sight of a major battle, the central action sequence of Barbara
Frietchie. Similarly, the hitherto amusing Gelwek and Greene, who
escaped prison to turn traitor and join the south, now become serious
as they are part of the sharpshooters positioned to fire on the Union
invadersand they are aiming for revenge on William. Arthur sees
William shot in the battle and takes him in his arms, then back to the
Frietchie home. Barbara must convince her father, in another emotional
confrontation, to take William into his home.
The complexity of the war and its involvement with family and honor
spirals with an order to search the home, Gelwek steps forward to deny
that William is there, and Colonel Frietchie obtains an order from
General Stonewall Jackson that negates Colonel Negly's instructions.
Jack, jealous of Barbara's devotion to William, tries to kill him.
For William's sake, she decides to fly the Stars and Stripes he loved
so well from her balcony as Jackson parades by victoriously. (This
echoes a scene in Silent Heroes -- Broncho, 1913 -- Ince's last Civil
War short, in which from the same height a father denounced the
townspeople who had accused his dying son of cowardice. Similarly,
Ince's The Battle of Gettysburg the same year had woven together the
story of a family split by the Civil War, following the convention of a
southern woman whose lover fights for the Union but whose brother is a
Confederate.) The crowd begins to jeer her and hurl threats for
spoiling their celebration, but Jackson warns that anyone who harms a
hair of Barbara's head will die like a dogthus cementing the esteem
for both sides in the conflict, and echoing the poem that had served as
the basis for the Fitch play. However, Jack, marching by, shoots
Barbaraand his father must carry out Jackson's order on his son.
Barbara, apparently dying, crawls to William's bedside.
This is where Barbara Frietchie should end, as Variety noted, but
instead a classic Hollywood coda is in store, despite the dramatic
crescendo. William's eyes open, and Barbara revives, and with the peace
of Appomatox the flag is raised once more. As the nation heals and
returns to life, so too is there a re-birth of the couple representing
north and south. A double wedding follows for William and Barbara, and
Arthur and Sue (Gertrude Short, who has provided comedy relief
throughout). The grandchildren of the protagonists are united in
fighting for their nation in the Great War, with the spirit of Lincoln
superimposed over the image of battle.
Running eight reels, well over 90 minutes, this was a near-epic
production, with a cost of $174,979, as I reveal in my Ince biography.
The facade of the pillared administration building of the Ince studio,
and its surrounding grounds, were liberally used for exteriors of the
antebellum mansion as well as a southern village and military camp.
Lambert Hillyer and Agnes Christine Johnson adapted the play, and the
Motion Picture News commented that Hillyer, also "the director, has
brought out the full force of the conflict that tore the nation
asunder." Barbara Frietchie was retitled Love of a Patriot for its
release in England.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Schmaltzy and very old fashioned., 14 July 2010
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This score of 4 reflects not only the film but the DVD copy of this
film from Televista. Televista specializes in obscure little films film
(often silents) but does absolutely nothing to restore the
films--issuing prints are are frequently blurry and scratchy. However,
were it not for this company, you'd never get to see this
long-forgotten film--so it's definitely the case of a mixed blessing.
Also, like several other Televista films I've seen, the running time
and the time listed on IMDb are not even close to being the same--with
the film running 102 minutes and not the 85 listed. This print is
particularly bad.
This film stars Florence Vidor and Edmund Lowe. Both are Marylanders
who are in love and are caught up in the Civil War. Due to her favoring
the South and him joining the Union Army, their love is doomed. Later,
when he comes back when his army is occupying the town, their animosity
is tested--and Barbara decides she WILL now marry him. So far, this
plot was pretty good. HOWEVER, boy does the film take a dreadful turn
later when it all degenerated into a schmaltzy mess--a very, very,
very, very, very unbelievable old fashioned mess. I could get into all
the reasons--suffice to say that the film looked dated even when it
came out in 1924. And, by the time the film ends, the film becomes the
most heavy-handed ultra-jingoistic patriotic mess I've ever seen. I am
proud to be an American, but at the end of the film I was practically
ready to become a card-carrying communist or member of Al-Qaeda--it was
that bad.
Overall, I can't see any logical reason to see this film. The DVD print
sucks, the plot is awful and the end is nauseating. 'Nuff said.
By the way, if you really care, the towns in the film are real.
Fredericktown is now simply known as Frederick and Hagerstown is the
site of the very famous Battle of Antietam during this war. I grew up
near the places and was a bit surprised to see them in mentioned in the
film.
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