Jump to content

Sparrows (1926 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sparrows
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWilliam Beaudine
Tom McNamara (uncredited)
Written byWinifred Dunn (story)
C. Gardner Sullivan (adaptation)
George Marion Jr. (titles)
Produced byMary Pickford
StarringMary Pickford
Gustav von Seyffertitz
CinematographyHal Mohr
Charles Rosher
Karl Struss
Edited byHarold McLernon
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • May 14, 1926 (1926-05-14) (US)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
Budget$463,000[1]
Box office$966,878 (rentals)[1]
Sparrows (1926) by William Beaudine

Sparrows is a 1926 American silent drama film about a young woman who rescues a baby from kidnappers. The film, which was originally titled Scraps, starred and was produced by Mary Pickford, who was the most powerful woman in Hollywood at the time.[2][3]

Plot

[edit]

Mr. Grimes and his wife operate a dismal "baby farm" near an alligator-infested swamp. Molly, an adolescent inmate and the oldest of their charges, attempts to provide the other poorly clothed, starving kids with loving maternal care. Most of the children are orphans. One mother sends her child a doll, but Grimes crushes its head and tosses it into the swamp.

The children are ordered to hide anytime someone comes to the farm. When a hog buyer shows up, Ambrose, the Grimes' son, maliciously prevents Splutters, one of the children, from hiding. The buyer then purchases the boy from Grimes.

Molly has promised the others that God will rescue them. When a boy asks why nothing has happened after a month, she tells him that He is busy attending to sparrows (a biblical reference).

Ambrose catches Molly with stolen potatoes, so she and the others are given no supper. She pleads for the children, especially the sick, youngest baby, to no avail. Late that night, in a vision, Christ enters the barn where they sleep and takes the baby. When Molly wakes up, the child is dead.

Joe Bailey and his associate bring a kidnapped baby girl to the farm for concealment until they receive a ransom from the rich father, Dennis Wayne. When Grimes reads about the kidnapping in the newspaper, he decides it is safer to chuck the baby into the swamp. When Ambrose grabs the little girl to carry out the plan, Molly gets her back. After she fights off Grimes with a pitchfork, he strands her in the hayloft and decides he must get rid of her, too. That night, Molly flees with the children. Grimes figures either the mud or the alligators will take care of the runaways. However, when the kidnappers come back for the baby, he leads them on a search.

Meanwhile, Splutters is brought to the police station, having been discovered by one of the search parties. He tells the policemen and Mr. Wayne about the baby farm.

Molly and the kids emerge unscathed from the swamp and hide aboard a boat, unaware it belongs to the kidnappers. Pursued by the police, Grimes runs into the swamp, but falls into deep mud and perishes, while the two criminals flee in the boat. Unable to shake the harbor patrol, they try to slip away in a dinghy, but are run over and drown.

The baby is reunited with her wealthy father, but when she refuses to drink her milk without Molly, Mr. Wayne offers Molly a comfortable home. She accepts only on condition that he take in the other children as well.

Cast

[edit]

Children:

  • Billy Butts
  • Jack Lavine
  • Billy "Red" Jones
  • Muriel McCormac
  • Florence Rogan
  • Mary McLain
  • Sylvia Bernard
  • Seesel Ann Johnson
  • Camille Johnson

Cast notes:

  • Sparrows was Pickford's next-to-last silent role, followed by 1927's My Best Girl. After that, Pickford made some talking pictures before retiring to Pickfair, her estate, with husband Douglas Fairbanks.[4]

Production

[edit]
Sparrows cover art from United Artists Pressbook, 1926

In later years, Pickford repeatedly recounted the story that she was concerned that director William Beaudine was jeopardizing the actors, particularly when he insisted she carry a real baby, rather than a doll as she wanted, across some water teeming with alligators (albeit with their jaws bound shut).[5] However, Hal Mohr, the film's director of photography, debunked this tale, saying "There wasn't an alligator within ten miles of Miss Pickford," and revealing in precise detail how the effect was done.[4][5]

Art director Harry Oliver went to great lengths to transform 4 acres (16,000 m2) of the back lot between Willoughby Avenue and Alta Vista Street into a stylized Gothic swamp.[5] The ground was scraped bare in places, 600 trees were transplanted, and pits dug and filled with a mixture of burned cork, sawdust and muddy water.[6]

Critical reception

[edit]
Sparrows ad from 1926 United Artists Pressbook
  • The New York Times: "Although Miss Pickford's performance is as flawless as ever, it is doubtful whether she served herself well in selecting this special screen story, in which there is an abundance of exaggerated suspense and a number of puerile ideas. It is an obvious heartstring tugger during most of its length, and it frequently dallies with the thrills of old fashioned melodramas."[citation needed]
  • Motion Picture Magazine, December 1925: "Melodrama is interwoven in the story and there is nothing new or startling about the plot. But you won't realize this until the last lovely close-up of Mary has faded from the screen. Which means, of course, that the story interests you so much that your critical faculty is dulled."[citation needed]
  • Picture Play, January 1927: "The choice of 'Sparrows' was a singular one for Mary Pickford to make, but no one can deny that she has done the picture surpassingly well. The subject is gloomy, and some of the horrors recall Dickens, yet the darkness is shot through with many laughs. Indeed, so heavily does the hand of melodrama smite 'Sparrows' that the picture passes beyond the bounds of credibility. Thus the spectator relaxes, content to give way to his amazement at Mary's skill. ... 'Sparrows' is well worth seeing."[citation needed]
  • Film historian Jeffrey Vance considers Sparrows to be Pickford's masterpiece. In his program notes for the Giorante del Cinema Muto (also knows as the Pordenone Silent Film Festival,) Vance writes in 2008: "Sparrows is her most fully realized and timeless work of art. The film’s superb performances, gothic production design, and cinematography all serve a suspenseful, emotionally compelling story anchored by a central performance by Pickford herself imbued with pathos, humor, and charm."[7]

Home media

[edit]

Milestone Film & Video released the Library of Congress restoration of Sparrows to DVD and Blu-ray on November 6, 2012, as part of a box set called Rags and Riches: Mary Pickford Collection, and contains an audio commentary track by film historians Jeffrey Vance and Tony Maietta.[8]

References

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Eyman, Scott (1990). Mary Pickford, America's Sweetheart. ISBN 1-55611-147-9. As one of Mary's most unexpected films and her only Gothic melodrama. Sparrows might have proved too strong for audiences; although it did well, it did somewhat less so than Little Annie Booneij. Produced at a cost of $463,455, its domestic gross was $966,878. Factoring in distribution and advertising costs, Mary realized a clear profit of nearly $200,000 without even considering the money derived from the film's foreign release.
  2. ^ Wood, Bret. "Sparrows (1926)". TCM.com.
  3. ^ Mankiewicz, Ben. Intro to Turner Classic Movies presentation ofSparrows (May 5, 2010)
  4. ^ a b Landazuri, Margarita. "Sparrows (1926)". TCM.com.
  5. ^ a b c Schmidt, Christel; Landazuri, Margarita. "Sparrows". San Francisco Silent Film Festival (2006).
  6. ^ "Sparrows (1926)" (PDF). Hippodrome Silent Film Festival.
  7. ^ "Sparrows Le Giornate del Cinema Muto/27th Pordenone Silent Film Festival program book October 4, 2008" (PDF).
  8. ^ "Sparrows | Milestone Films". milestonefilms.com. Archived from the original on February 6, 2015.
[edit]