Film Review
Anyone who believes that the great pioneering film director D.W. Griffith only made grand historical epics
such as
The Birth of a Nation (1915)
will be pleasantly surprised by this far more modest piece, a simple
but enchanting tale of pastoral love lost and won in which the legendary director shows his
human side as well as his consummate skill as a filmmaker.
True Heart Susie was one of a
series of comparatively low budget films that Griffith made for Adolf
Zukor's film production company Artcraft, after having sustained considerable
financial losses through his monumental anti-war piece
Intolerance
(1916). The star of the film is Lillian Gish, an icon of early
American cinema and superlative screen performer who appeared in many
of Griffith's films, notably
Broken Blossoms (1919)
and
Orphans of the Storm (1921).
True Heart Susie may lack the mind-boggling
scale and staggering ambition of Griffith's previous epic productions but it is
just as captivating with its intimate and sensitive rendering of a
bittersweet romance. There is a startling realism and
authenticity to this film which few films of this era possess (it anticipates some of
Frank Borzage's low-key melodramas such as
7th Heaven (1927)
and
Lucky Star (1929)), achieved
through near-naturalistic performances (as opposed to the more usual
overly expressive style of acting) and use of natural locations.
The idyllic rural setting transports the spectator into another age,
one of innocence and bucolic simplicity, which had all but vanished by
the time the film was made. In contrast to some of Griffith's
better known, this film does not overwhelm the spectator with its
grandness and elaborate cinematic technique. Instead, it is a
masterfully composed down-to-earth tale in whch two ordinary people
resolve the mysteries of love, with a little help from Old Father Time.
An understated yet spellbinding jewel of silent cinema.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next D.W. Griffith film:
Orphans of the Storm (1921)
Film Synopsis
Countryside neighbours Suzie and William are in love, but being young
and inexperienced in the ways of love, neither knows how to open his
heart to the other. William wants to go to college but his
father, a poor farmer, cannot afford the fees. Suzie comes to
William's aid, selling her treasured cow and some other possessions to
pay for his college education. Knowing nothing of Suzie's kind
gesture, William assumes that he is merely the beneficiary of an
anonymous philanthropist. When William returns home a few years
later, he is a man of the world and Suzie hopes that he will take her
as his wife. These hopes are dashed when her sweetheart falls for
Bettina, a modern Chicago girl who uses paint and powder to land
herself a husband to keep her in the manner to which she has grown
accustomed. It is not long before William regrets marrying Bettina.
She cannot cook, she taunts him constantly around the house, and once
she has scraped her make-up off her face she is no more attractive than
any other woman. If only William had married his first true love,
the true hearted Suzie...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.