Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuTwo sisters want to know whether there is romance in their future. One sister pulls the petals off of a flower, while the other has her fortune told by a gypsy. When the gypsy tells the fort... Alles lesenTwo sisters want to know whether there is romance in their future. One sister pulls the petals off of a flower, while the other has her fortune told by a gypsy. When the gypsy tells the fortune so as to serve his own purposes, complications soon develop.Two sisters want to know whether there is romance in their future. One sister pulls the petals off of a flower, while the other has her fortune told by a gypsy. When the gypsy tells the fortune so as to serve his own purposes, complications soon develop.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- A Gypsy
- (Nicht genannt)
- The Spinster
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- A Farmhand
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- A Farmhand
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- A Farmer
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- A Gypsy
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- …
- A Farmhand
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- A Farmer
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When I view silents I am seeing the birth of film. Knowing there is not going to be much of a plot I look for scenery, set design, costuming/hairstyles, and cinematography/composition. Since there is not much costuming in the film, except for the gypsies (with the wagon being real), we see what the people and places of 1910 looked like. Since filming took place outside on a windy day, housing, gardens, fields, waterfalls are all on location and are as they existed then. There is the beautiful Delaware Water Gap falls for a fantastic romantic backdrop which must have feasted the eyes of national movie goers who never saw the likes. And the waving field of wild flowers on a hillside amazed me it did not get trampled to death which tells me Griffith did not do many takes.
Then there is Pickford and Robinson who do not overact their parts as sisters, however Graybill the gypsy did - but that is what was expected of silent actors. This makes Pickford and Robinson all the more accomplished early on in their careers because they were able to get their feelings and longings across without much exaggeration. Griffith for his part shows how tight he can edit his films. View the film as a student of film history.
** 1/2 (out of 4)
D.W. Griffith film about a pair of sisters (one played by Mary Pickford) who wonder when they are going to find true love. One goes to a gypsy for her future while the other peels pedals off a daisy. I'm not sure what Griffith had against gypsies but here's another film that shows them in a very bad way. I think this is the forth or fifth film from this era that Griffith has used the film to bash these people and that doesn't even include his very first film. The movie has a somewhat good story but there's very little life to the thing. The chase at the end is among the worst I've seen from Griffith but Pickford is as charming as ever.
Pickford plays one of a pair of sisters who are earnestly seeking signs as to what romantic attachments the future might hold for them, with the 'picking petals from a flower' method being one of their attempts to find out. Later, a gypsy fortune-teller gets involved, and the story that develops then becomes fairly eventful for such a short film.
The innocence of the girls and their familiar questions is contrasted with the more serious story developments. For the most part, the movie is done pretty well, and is worth seeing, particularly for Pickford's presence in the cast.
Pickford shines in the lead role. Director D.W. Griffith and photographer G.W. Bitzer team-up to provide some typically shimmering exterior images. Owen Moore, Alfred Paget, Mack Sennett, and Charles West are among the notable "extras". The story is quite neatly done, albeit not recommended for P.C. police; it has the stereotypical bad "Gypsy". It's not the first, or the last, time the "scoundrels" (dis-)grace a Griffith picture.
***** What the Daisy Said (7/11/10) D.W. Griffith ~ Mary Pickford, Gertrude Robinson, Joseph Graybill
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Title Card: Martha sees her Gypsy hero's perfidy.
- Alternative VersionenIn 1999, the Mary Pickford Foundation copyrighted a 13-minute version with a musical score composed by Maria Newman.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Mary Pickford: A Life on Film (1997)
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Laufzeit
- 16 Min.
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix