An already engaged young woman is blackmailed into marrying a count in order to save her father from imprisonment.An already engaged young woman is blackmailed into marrying a count in order to save her father from imprisonment.An already engaged young woman is blackmailed into marrying a count in order to save her father from imprisonment.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRe-released in 1920 and re-titled "Frivolous Wives" to cash in on Rudolph Valentino's newfound popularity.
- Alternate versionsThe film was originally reviewed at 7 reels, but it is unclear whether this version was ever released.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Alice Guy, 1st Female Filmmaker (2021)
Featured review
A typical pre-twenties silent melodrama centered around a main character who must sacrifice her own happiness for Duty. Here we have Mary (Vera Sisson), an ingénue who, to save her father from disgrace, gives up the man she loves to marry a blackmailing gigolo, Count Roberto (Rudolph Valentino, playing a more developed version of the "cabaret parasite" from "The Eyes of Youth"). As often happens with this sort of movie, the wicked supporting characters of the gigolo and the sly, sexy stepmother (Kathleen Kirkham)with whom he is in cahoots and having an affairare far more interesting than the virtuous leads. Perhaps Lillian Gish could have made prissy Mary's dilemma affecting , but as played by Sisson she comes off as a gormless twit who cannot even wade into ankle deep seawater to retrieve a rambunctious toddler. As the teaser title implies, the marriage between the gigolo and the prig stays unconsummated, everything leading up to the moment when a frustrated Roberto breaks down Mary's bedroom door (surely what the original audience went in hopes of seeing rather than Mary's noble sacrifices). She doesn't seem worth the effort, but this scene is excitingly filmed and is an interesting precursor to a similar event in "The Son of the Sheik."
Valentino and Kirhham make this film worthwhile (there's a real spark between them), but try to find the restored DVD version, rather than sloppily made video production.
Valentino and Kirhham make this film worthwhile (there's a real spark between them), but try to find the restored DVD version, rather than sloppily made video production.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 11 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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