The Little Minister (1921) Poster

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6/10
A Lovely Gypsy Betty Compson
boblipton24 September 2018
The town of Thrums in Scotland is in an uproar. The weavers' wages have been cut and they're meeting and rioting because of it. The local nobleman, Edwin Stevens, controls the wages and he has no intention of doing so. Instead he's sent the local army regiment (who wear full dress uniform on all occasions) to capture the gypsy girl, Betty Compson, who has been distributing food to the poor and helping the leaders escape -- with the unwitting collusion of George Hackathorne, the new minister, who has fallen in love with the wild creature. The gossipy Church elders are aghast. None of these men know that she's really Lady Barbara, daughter of Edwin Stevens, playing dress up and enjoying the liberty of being a despised creature.

The movie glides along its plot rapidly, propelled by the J.M. Barrie story, a little too abruptly for my taste at a mere hour in length. However the director is Penrhyn Stanlaws. He rose to prominence as an illustrator; among his models were Mabel Normand and Florence Labadie, There's certainly evidence of the film to show that he had a fine eye for beauty, not only of the feminine variety, but of outdoor scenery and group compositions.

Although I prefer versions like the Katherine Hepburn movie of the 1930s, this one is good to watch and talky enough with its many titles in standard English. It's worthwhile for the visuals, even if the story is reduced to its outlines.
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Betty Compson Stars
drednm11 June 2016
Betty Compson stars as the Gypsy girl known as Babbie. She incurs the wrath of Lord Rintoul when it's suspected she has warned the riotous weavers that the police have been called. The local weavers are incensed that Rintoul has lowered their wages. The innocent new minister (George Hackathorne) gets involved after meeting Babbie by chance in the woods where he is writing his sermon. His infatuation with the wild beauty incurs the wrath of the local town council but he refuses to help entrap her. Will love prevail? Long thought lost, a print was found in a European archive and its intertitles have been translated into English. This was an important starring film for Betty Compson. It's interesting to see the role reversal with Compson playing the disguised hero and Hackathorne the young innocent. Compson is, as always, fascinating to watch.
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10/10
Excellent
gkeith_128 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Spoilers. Opinions. Observations. Reflections.

The gypsies are stereotypically accused of many bad things. One gypsy is actually an aristocratic daughter dressed in clever disguise. She is charming and capricious to the new tiny of height minister.

She even appears to him in the pages of his Bible he is trying to read. Shame on her.

Her name is Lady Barbara, also known as Babbie. As a gypsy, she is kind to neighborhood residents. She is very pretty. They like her.

In this industrializing weaver town, the woven products are bringing in smaller income. They previously had been made by hand, but now machinery has made the products cheaper to produce.

I have followed this story as a stage play, plus in other films made of this story. It is interesting to see the different versions.

Halliwell is a hunk. The minister is gentlemanly but a shrimp, and he wins the heart of Babbie.
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The Little Minister (1921) - Lost Film ?
PamelaShort28 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Moving Picture World, 7 January 1922, page 112] When the weavers of Thrums, enraged by a reduction in prices for their products, rise against the manufacturers, Gavin ( George Hackathorne ) , 'the little minister' intervenes with the constables in their behalf. Babbie ( Betty Compson ) , a supposed Gypsy girl, is suspected of having notified the rioters that the police were coming so they might be prepared to fight, and a price is placed on her capture. But when Gavin questions her, her beauty and appeal charms him and he aids her to escape. A romance between the pair impends, much to the dislike of the elders of the Scotch kirk and Gavin is about to be defrocked when the Gypsy girl is brought into the meeting and discloses that she is in reality Lady Barbara, daughter of Lord Rintoul ( Edwin Stevens ) , the baron-magistrate of the district. In aiding the girl to escape Gavin had told the constables she was his wife, which in Scotland constitutes legal marriage if admittance is made before witnesses.

The 1921 film version adapted from the novel, The Little Minister by James M. Barrie, was produced by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation and starred the popular actress Betty Compson. According to one source it is listed as a lost film, although a print may survive at the Cinematheque Royale De Belgique. For fans of silent cinema, it still remains unavailable for viewing either way.
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