A young American has her ship torpedoed by a German U-boat but makes it back to her ancestral home in France, where she witnesses German brutality firsthand.
Mary Pickford
Angela Moore
Jack Holt
Karl von Austreim
Raymond Hatton
Count Jules de Destin
Hobart Bosworth
German Colonel
Walter Long
German Captain
Wallace Beery
German Soldier (uncredited)
Norman Kerry
Wounded Soldier (uncredited)
Colleen Moore
Maid (uncredited)
Ramon Novarro
Wounded Soldier (uncredited)
Sam Wood
Wounded Soldier (uncredited)
James Neill
Senator John Moore
Ben Alexander
Bobby Moore
Guy Oliver
Frederick von Austreim
Edythe Chapman
Mrs. von Austreim
Lillian Leighton
Angela's Great Aunt
DeWitt Jennings
English Barrister
Olive Corbett
Nurse (uncredited)
Lucile Dorrington
Nurse (uncredited)
Clarence Geldart
Submarine Commander U-Boat 21 (uncredited)
Carl Gerard
Reverend (uncredited)
Robert Gordon
Wounded Soldier (uncredited)
Gordon Griffith
Child (uncredited)
Charles L. MacDonald
Wounded Soldier (uncredited)
Bernard Niemeyer
Wounded Soldier (uncredited)
Sam Robinson
Noah (uncredited)
Marian Swayne
Lindy Gray (uncredited)
Director
Joseph Levering
Director, Writer
Cecil B. DeMille
Screenplay
Jeanie Macpherson
Writer
Clarence J. Harris
February 20, 2025
7
With the Great War ravaging Europe as this film was made, it’s a clear signal of patriotism from star Mary Pickford as she depicts the feisty “Angela”. She’s from wealthy stock and on her birthday is being courted by French “Count Jules” (Raymond Hatton) and by her slight favourite, the Prussian soldier “Karl” (Jack Holt). Before she has to make any choices, though, both head to their respective homes to fight. Shortly thereafter, she decides to travel to her aunt’s home in France only for her liner to be torpedoed and for her to find that when she eventually arrives at her stately pile that the Bosch are intent on billeting there and behaving abominably too. Her American status gives her a degree of protection so long as she stays out of the conflict, and her stiff-necked friend “Karl” is amongst the occupiers, but when their cruelty to the house’s staff and to an elderly gent shock her to the core, she decides that she can no longer stay on the fence. What now ensues sees her bravely attempt to help the Allied forces at great peril not just to her, but to her friend who would try to keep her as alive as his upbringing would permit! That merely invites a trial for espionage and treason and a firing squad for both of them looms… Can they find a way to escape the bullets? This is an effective propaganda tool, this film, illustrating just how ghastly the enemy were; how indiscriminate their violence was inflicted and how generally boorish and superior they were. Pickford and Cecil B. DeMille clearly wanted to ram that point home to domestic audiences and on that front they are quite effective. It really could have done with some more light, but even dingy as it is it delivers quite a potent analysis of uniformed thuggery tempered by conflicted romance and a semblance of human decency. It has it’s zealous moments - from all sides, and in it’s way it is quite a tough film to watch as though not graphic in terms of photography, it is in terms of psychology. It has a clear message to send and is worth a watch, I’d say.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00