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Sunday, July 14, 1918
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27
Beautiful Star and Artistic Atmosphere Make Old Story Entertaining
Louise Glaum in
"WEDLOCK"
ParaIta=Hodkinson
DIRECTOR Wallace Worsley
AUTHOR Denison Clift
SUPERVISOR Robert Brunton
SCENARIO BY Denison Clift
CAMERAMAN L. Guy Wilky
AS A WHOLE Appealing star, artistic lightings
and a capable cast make this entertaining.
STORY Old idea has been given new twists and
holds well throughout despite many convenient situations.
DIRECTION Gave good atmosphere, developed
characterizations and lifted ordinary situations by intelligent treatment.
PHOTOGRAPHY Generally very good except
for one rather harshly lighted exterior set.
LIGHTINGS Pleasing; especially good on star
CAMERA WORK Very good
STAR Beautiful and appealing. Should
win many new friends in sympathetic role.
SUPPORT Well balanced and fitted for
respective roles.
EXTERIORS Good; not many
INTERIORS Artistic and fitted atmosphere
DETAIL Good; inserts were particularly
well done.
CHARACTER OF STORY Considerable meller
but nothing objectionable.
LENGTH OF PRODUCTION 4,769 feet
IF there Is any doubt in your minds as to whether a star who has made her reputation in vamp parts can put over a sympathetic role and make you believe it, just give this picture a careful onceover. We get Miss Glaum in this as a young wife who gives her all for the man she loves, even sticking by him after he has divorced her and re-married, and say boys, Louise makes you believe it! She's so denied appealing in this that your folks are going to forget that she ever ruined a few hundred lives, more or less — on the screen — and I'm sure that a few more characterizations like this will build a tremendous following for this very appealing personality.
The story doesn't contain much that's new — it's the characterizations and the way the production has been handled that puts this over as capital entertainment.
Louise is an orphan telephone girl who is married to Jack Gilbert in secret and when Jack's high-fallutin' parents get wind of it they demand an annulment of the marriage, so that Jack can marry a girl in his own social sphere. Louise comes back to Jack's mother later to tell her that there is soon to be a child but the mother turns her away, explaining that they will provide liberally but that the annulment must stand.
Louise's child dies and she is about to give up in despair when she meets Charlie Gunn, a young minister, and becomes a worker in his mission, helping to care for other orphan children. During this time she befriends an old prospector, who, later striking it rich, shares his wealth with her.
In the meantime. Jack has become the victim of a mining fraud and is sent to prison. He escapes and leads a haunted life when he is conveniently picked up by Louise after he has been thrown out of a saloon. The officers are on his trail and Louise induces him to give himself up. saying that she will try to clear his guilt. This she does, by finding the "poipers" which prove that Jack was innocent and, learning that his second wife had divorced him while he was in prison. Jack and Louise are happily re-united.
Herschel Mayall who was the willun who implicated Jack in the crooked deal, was very good in the role while Leatrice Joy appeared as Jack's second wife. Others who appeared were Helen Dunbar. Joseph J. Dowling. Beverly Randolph. Harry Archer, Ida Lewis, Clifford Alexander and Aggie Herring.
HOBAKT HENLEY
M.P.D.A.
Director o *PARENTAGE,ri
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