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Fine Feathers

  • 1912
  • 15m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
47
YOUR RATING
Phillips Smalley in Fine Feathers (1912)
DramaShort

Arthur Vaughn, a rising young artist, steps into a cobbler's shop to "save his sole," and sees there a girl, the daughter of the cobbler. The cobbler is an habitual drunkard, and the artist ... Read allArthur Vaughn, a rising young artist, steps into a cobbler's shop to "save his sole," and sees there a girl, the daughter of the cobbler. The cobbler is an habitual drunkard, and the artist tells the girl to leave the squalor of her surroundings and offers her work in his studio.... Read allArthur Vaughn, a rising young artist, steps into a cobbler's shop to "save his sole," and sees there a girl, the daughter of the cobbler. The cobbler is an habitual drunkard, and the artist tells the girl to leave the squalor of her surroundings and offers her work in his studio. The girl accepts. One day, the artist paints her as she stands, in her rags. It is pronou... Read all

  • Directors
    • Phillips Smalley
    • Lois Weber
  • Writer
    • Lois Weber
  • Stars
    • Phillips Smalley
    • Lois Weber
    • Charles De Forrest
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    47
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Phillips Smalley
      • Lois Weber
    • Writer
      • Lois Weber
    • Stars
      • Phillips Smalley
      • Lois Weber
      • Charles De Forrest
    • 2User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast3

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    Phillips Smalley
    Phillips Smalley
    • Arthur Vaughn - the Artist
    Lois Weber
    Lois Weber
    • The Artist's Model
    Charles De Forrest
    Charles De Forrest
      • Directors
        • Phillips Smalley
        • Lois Weber
      • Writer
        • Lois Weber
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews2

      6.347
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      Featured reviews

      7boblipton

      What Absence Makes

      Phillips Smalley is a rising young artist and Lois Weber is the drudge of his studio's building. One day she is sitting wearily in his apartment when he comes upon her and thinks she would make a fine subject to paint. A month later, she examines the portrait and doesn't care for it. Smalley paints another of her in fine clothes. The two pictures win an award. Weber realizes she loves him, but he turns her down. Charles De Forrest, the wealthy man who has bought the paintings, sends her a note suggesting she go away.

      It's a well-told tale of class and perception, and Miss Weber and Mr. Smalley give fine performances. The real kudos, however, belong to the unnamed camera operator, who works with his subjects, particularly Miss Weber, to render each shot beautiful.
      Cineanalyst

      Double Meanings

      Continuing from the dichotomy Lois Weber established or had established (given that it's difficult to track a filmmaker's progress when so much of it's now lost) by "From Death to Life" (1911), "Fine Feathers" features another early instance of the formula that would make one of the greatest--and highest paid--directors of the 1910s and, to some degree, the 1920s: that is, a message delivered in art, or vise versa, I suppose, depending on how one looks at it. On one level, then, this film is a cross-class romance with perhaps a commentary on exploitation of women in the workplace or social mobility. This is starkly represented in the twin paintings in the film, one of the muse in her raggedy lower-class garb and another of her dressed in upper-class finery. On another level, the film isn't merely represented by the paintings; it's about them.

      To me, the stories in these films are of secondary interest, if of much interest at all beyond the sensationalism of Weber's more controversial political and religious views in her later work. Compared to the blunt nature that would become of her lecturing, it's in the subtlety of her cinematic artistry that I look for salvation. That's where her greatness lied. So, in "Fine Feathers," we have a painter and a muse, and he paints twin paintings of her. Doppelgänger reflections, which not only work on the level of class or sex, but as a reference to the doubled nature of visual art, including cinema. Note that the twin paintings share the same name as the film itself. The one painting alone is already a twin, a manufactured representation of the real world referent, with the reflexivity furthered in its doubling. Mise-en-abymes, art-within-art, and doubling within the inherently doubled art form of film.

      Intriguing, too, how Weber deals with woman-as-muse and her subject/object relations, or "circulation and commodification of images of women," as the booklet notes say for the Pioneers: First Women Filmmakers set (and evidently based on Shelley Stamp's commentary on the film in her book "Lois Weber in Early Hollywood"), and that despite the inventor in "From Death to Life" and the painter here being men, that it was a woman directing from behind the camera. I also like the loop aesthetic of ending the picture where it began. And, indeed, Stamp situates "Fine Feathers" within a series of Weber's films that dealt with art and sex, including adulterous affairs involving artists in "Lost Illusions" (1911 and not to be confused, as it has been, with "The Price" (1911)), "Shadows of Life" and "James Lee's Wife" (both 1913 and lost films), and she specifically examines the paintings in "Fine Feathers" with the photographic image in "A Japanese Idyll" (1912) and the cinematic mirror image in "Suspense" (1913). Look to the art; that's where the important message lies.

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      Related interests

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      Drama
      Benedict Cumberbatch in The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar (2023)
      Short

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        The Fine Feathers is preserved in the Library of Congress collection.

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • February 1, 1912 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Languages
        • None
        • English
      • Production company
        • Rex Motion Picture Company
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 15m
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Silent
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1

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