Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley

1918

Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley is a 1918 American silent romantic comedy film starring Mary Pickford that was directed by Marshall Neilan and written by Frances Marion based upon a novel by Belle K. Maniates.[2]

Set in San Francisco during the early 1900s, the film revolves around Amarilly (Mary Pickford), the daughter of a widowed scrubwoman. Amarilly is proud of her hard-working Irish family, and takes care of her five roughhouse brothers. She is engaged to bartender Terry McGowan (William Scott), who gets her a job as a cigarette girl in his cafe after a fire unfairly causes her to lose her job as a theater scrubwoman. While working as a cigarette girl, she meets Gordon Phillips (Norman Kerry), a handsome and wealthy but frivolous young man, who is a society sculptor.

Terry becomes jealous when Amarilly starts hanging out with Gordon, and he breaks off the engagement. Gordon offers Amarilly a job with his wealthy and snobbish aunt, Mrs. Phillips (Ida Waterman). When the neighborhood is quarantined after a breakout of scarlet fever, Mrs. Phillips decides to take the time to teach Amarilly high class manners in a Pygmalion-like experiment. However, once she discovers her nephew has fallen in love with Amarilly, she turns against her. Mrs. Phillips tries to humiliate Amarilly by inviting her family over for a social party.

Amarilly is outraged and returns to her old home. She sees Terry and invites him for supper. He is delighted, and on the way to her house, he stops to buy expensive 50 cent violets, even though he had earlier passed up violets at 15 cents. He is shot by accident, and barely makes it to Amarilly's house before collapsing. Terry survives. Amarilly visits him in the hospital and tells him that when he gets out, they have a date at City Hall.

The final scene is five years later. Amarilly is in a sidecar on Terry's motor bike; they both are nicely dressed and seem to be doing well. Then it is revealed under the blanket she has a baby, and behind Terry is a little boy.

Like many American films of the time, Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley was subject to cuts by city and state film censorship boards. For example, the Chicago Board of Censors required a cut, i Reel 1, of a closeup of money in a man's hand and, Reel 4, maid opening door to alleged house of ill-fame and man entering.[3]

Quelle: Wikipedia(englisch)
Kinostart:1918
weitere Titel:
À chacun sa vie
Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley id nb
Amore d'artista
Vaskekonens Datter
Genre:Liebesfilm, romantische Komödie, Stummfilm
Herstellungsland:Vereinigte Staaten
Originalsprache:
Farbe:Schwarzweiß
IMDB: 815
Verleih:Netflix
Regie:Marshall Neilan
Drehbuch:Frances Marion
Kamera:Walter Stradling
Produzent:Adolph Zukor
Darsteller:Mary Pickford
William Scott
Kate Price
Norman Kerry
Gustav von Seyffertitz
Leo White
Herbert Standing
Margaret Landis
Tom Wilson
Wesley Barry
Fred Goodwins
George Hackathorne
Es liegt kein Transcript zu diesem Film vor.
Wenn Sie diese Daten spenden möchten, dann wenden Sie sich gerne an uns.

Rezensionen:

Datenstand: 10.11.2023 18:59:07Uhr