Fanchon, a wild young girl, resides in a forest with her unconventional grandmother accused of witchcraft by villagers.Fanchon, a wild young girl, resides in a forest with her unconventional grandmother accused of witchcraft by villagers.Fanchon, a wild young girl, resides in a forest with her unconventional grandmother accused of witchcraft by villagers.
Russell Bassett
- Landry's Father
- (uncredited)
Gertrude Norman
- Fadette
- (uncredited)
Jack Pickford
- Young Bully
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia2017 Prologue on Restored Film: "Mary Pickford died believing that Fanchon the Cricket, released in 1915, was among her lost films. She was devastated because she had actively tried to preserve her films and Fanchon was the only time she appeared with both her sister Lottie and her brother Jack.
In 2012, the Mary Pickford Foundation learned that a nitrate dupe of Fanchon the Cricket was preserved at La Cinemateque francaise, and conversations began that led to a unique partnership between the Pickford Foundation and the Cinemateque to restore the film. An incomplete nitrate print was preserved at the British Film Institute and, with their cooperation, we now had all the elements necessary for a successful restoration. L'Immagine Ritrovata laboratory in Italy then scanned the two nitrate elements directly at 4K resolution, and further digital restoration was performed. A new negative and 35MM prints were created from the restored digital version.
Colors were recreated by referring to the original tinting notes on the nitrate print and on the dupe negative leaders. The missing English intertitles have been reconstructed by translating from the French on the dupe negative. The digital mastering was completed at Roundabout Entertainment in Los Angeles.
Fanchon the Cricket captures Mary Pickford at the height of the popularity of her 'Waif' character. The film was directed by James Kirkwood, photographed by Edward Wynard and based on the novel by George Sand, adapted for the screen by James Kirkwood and Francis Marion."
- GoofsWhen Fanchon is howling to scare the women, they run to the men for safety. The men didn't hear the howling, though they're only a few feet away.
- Quotes
Landry Barbeau: I'll do anything you ask of me.
Fanchon - the Cricket: Then, kiss me!
- Crazy creditsOn ending credits of 2017 restoration: "Special Thanks to David Pierce."
- ConnectionsVersion of Fanchon the Cricket (1912)
Featured review
A rare screening of this obscure Mary Pickford title was one of the most anticipated events from the 2014 Cinefest in Syracuse, N.Y., but, as is so often the case, rarity doesn't equate with quality. The film, lamely directed by James Kirkwood, lacks technique. Kirkwood keeps the actors grouped in tight bunches, more like a faithful sheepdog than a movie director, reflecting none of the dynamic energy of films from the same period produced under the auspices of D.W. Griffith, Cecil B. DeMille and Thomas Ince. The lovely and entrancing Pickford is always worth watching, but her role here doesn't provide enough dramatic weight, and nothing she does lingers in the memory except for a lively scrap with her real-life brother, Jack Pickford, who plays a bratty villager. Mary's rather homely sister, Lottie, also has a role, making this picture perhaps the only extant example of all three Pickford siblings appearing in the same film.
- pfors-647-501497
- Mar 22, 2014
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Fanchon the Cricket
- Filming locations
- Delaware Water Gap, New Jersey, USA(location)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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