An American who has lived much of his life outside the country returns to Arizona for the first time in years and encounters villainy.An American who has lived much of his life outside the country returns to Arizona for the first time in years and encounters villainy.An American who has lived much of his life outside the country returns to Arizona for the first time in years and encounters villainy.
Frank Campeau
- Man at Trading Post
- (uncredited)
Bull Montana
- Fish Cannery Worker
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis was one of the few films in which Douglas Fairbanks did not perform most of his own stunts. Shortly after filming began he badly hurt his wrists while attempting a running mount of a horse; the animal got spooked and took off just as he was jumping on her. Veteran stuntman Richard Talmadge, who had previously doubled for Fairbanks in other films for stunts that the studio deemed too dangerous for him to perform, was hired as Fairbanks' stunt double for most of the stunts in this film.
- GoofsAt about 5:54 into the film, Richard Marshall IV throws well-worn Barber half dollars at the feet of townspeople imploring them to celebrate a newlywed couple. Minutes earlier, a title card identified the year as 1880. The Barber half dollar was first introduced into American coinage in 1892, twelve years after the scene depicted. The most likely half dollar he should have thrown was the Liberty-seated type.
- Crazy credits"FOREWORD: Our thanks are gratefully expressed to government officials, tribal chiefs, and to the hundreds of picturesque Hopi Indians on their reservation near the Painted Desert of Arizona, who, in their savage way heartily welcomed us to their prehistoric villages and with primitive cheerfulness played an important part in this picture."
- ConnectionsFeatured in I, Douglas Fairbanks (2018)
Featured review
This is one of only two silent films directed by Victor Fleming and starring Douglas Fairbanks, but Fleming had worked as a cinematographer on many of Fairbanks's earlier comedies. The storyline here is similar to most of the other films Fairbanks made before switching to adventure swashbucklers with "The Mark of Zorro" (1920). "The Mollycoddle", however, is distinguished by polished film-making.
An introduction sets up Fairbanks's character's great Western heritage, only to find Fairbanks a mollycoddle--an expatriated dandy, who imagines Wall Street to be terrorized by cowboy gunfights. From there, Fairbanks must get back to his roots, defeat the bad guys and live happily ever after with the female lead. Fairbanks brought his usual boyish charm to the part and performed plenty of acrobatic stunts. Actually, I think, when done well, these modern comedies somewhat highlighted his talents better than did the later swashbucklers, as he's not overshadowed by a lavish production. Wallace Berry, a decade before his more prominent parts, played the role of the villain here and demonstrated that he was always a fine actor.
Surprisingly, an animation sequence reveals to us early in the film that Berry's character is secretly a jewel smuggler. It's no great feat in animation in itself, but its placement is remarkable for 1920. A rotating camera to represent Fairbanks's sickness in one scene, in addition to the apparent use of a small-scale model, transitioning between supposed establishing shots and closer looks, during the climax are other examples of the film-making ingenuity for this Fairbanks vehicle. It's interesting to see how much refinement in movie-making had occurred from, say, 1916 (when Fairbanks starred in "Flirting with Fate", among other films) to 1920. It was an exciting period of rapid development for the art. Another surprise in "The Mollycoddle" is the comparatively respectful depiction of the Hopi Indians; usually for a film made in 1920 (or for years afterward), the least one may reasonably hope for is to not have Caucasians playing Native-Americans. Overall, Fleming and crew did well to support Fairbanks in making a film permitting of a rousing good time.
An introduction sets up Fairbanks's character's great Western heritage, only to find Fairbanks a mollycoddle--an expatriated dandy, who imagines Wall Street to be terrorized by cowboy gunfights. From there, Fairbanks must get back to his roots, defeat the bad guys and live happily ever after with the female lead. Fairbanks brought his usual boyish charm to the part and performed plenty of acrobatic stunts. Actually, I think, when done well, these modern comedies somewhat highlighted his talents better than did the later swashbucklers, as he's not overshadowed by a lavish production. Wallace Berry, a decade before his more prominent parts, played the role of the villain here and demonstrated that he was always a fine actor.
Surprisingly, an animation sequence reveals to us early in the film that Berry's character is secretly a jewel smuggler. It's no great feat in animation in itself, but its placement is remarkable for 1920. A rotating camera to represent Fairbanks's sickness in one scene, in addition to the apparent use of a small-scale model, transitioning between supposed establishing shots and closer looks, during the climax are other examples of the film-making ingenuity for this Fairbanks vehicle. It's interesting to see how much refinement in movie-making had occurred from, say, 1916 (when Fairbanks starred in "Flirting with Fate", among other films) to 1920. It was an exciting period of rapid development for the art. Another surprise in "The Mollycoddle" is the comparatively respectful depiction of the Hopi Indians; usually for a film made in 1920 (or for years afterward), the least one may reasonably hope for is to not have Caucasians playing Native-Americans. Overall, Fleming and crew did well to support Fairbanks in making a film permitting of a rousing good time.
- Cineanalyst
- Jul 8, 2005
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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