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ComedyDramaFamily

Pollyanna

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When Pollyanna is orphaned, she's sent to live with her crotchety Aunt Polly. Pollyanna discovers that many of the people in her aunt's New England hometown are as ill-tempered as her aunt. But Pollyanna's incurable optimism - exemplified by her "glad game", in which she looks for the bright side of every situation - brings a change to the staid old community.

Release Date : 1920-01-18

Language :

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : United ArtistsMary Pickford Company

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Mary Pickford

Character Name : Pollyanna Whittier

Original Name : Mary Pickford

Gender : Female

Katherine Griffith

Character Name : Aunt Polly Harrington

Original Name : Katherine Griffith

Gender : Female

Howard Ralston

Character Name : Jimmy Bean

Original Name : Howard Ralston

Gender : Male

Helen Jerome Eddy

Character Name : Nancy Thing

Original Name : Helen Jerome Eddy

Gender : Female

George Berrell

Character Name : Old Tom

Original Name : George Berrell

Gender : Male

William Courtleigh

Character Name : John Pendleton

Original Name : William Courtleigh

Gender : Male

Herbert Prior

Character Name : Dr. Tom Chilton

Original Name : Herbert Prior

Gender : Male

Wharton James

Character Name : Rev. John Whittier

Original Name : Wharton James

Gender : Male

Doc Crane

Character Name : Bit Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Doc Crane

Gender : Male

Joan Marsh

Character Name : Bit Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Joan Marsh

Gender : Female

Frederick Peters

Character Name : Bit Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Frederick Peters

Gender : Male

Gordon Sackville

Character Name : Bit Role (uncredited)

Original Name : Gordon Sackville

Gender : Male

Reviews

P

Peter McGinn

@narrator56

2021-06-23

It seems unfair to even review a movie like this. After all, I didn’t find it to be particularly entertaining and I didn’t feel the adaptation from the book was done well. That usually would translate into a low rating for a film, right? But I don’t feel it is appropriate to pan a movie that was made 100 years ago. The film industry was in its infancy and indeed, the world was a different place. I would want to see a lot of the other silent movies before I even attempt a critical review. Lacking that, I will just make some observations about stuff I found interesting. This version begins showing a scene not in the book. In fact, we are ten minutes into the film before we get to where the book starts. It might have been done to establish the nature of Pollyanna and to show her father dying, an event not specifically described in the book. I didn’t quite buy into Pickford looking like a young girl, as others seem to have done. She has the body shape and size to play a child, but her face screams adult to me. That is odd, as some pictures of Mary Pickford do look rather young to me. Perhaps the make-up needed on film worked against the character’s age. I often think modern movies utilize actresses who are too beautiful to portray a plain woman, sometimes having her transform into a more beautiful lady. But oddly, I thought the Aunt Polly actress was too plain, so that when her hair was done up, there seemed to be no improvement to my eyes. That was weird. There are cute scenes here and there. I am guessing Pickford enjoyed physical humor. She leaps around like a young girl, and her face was expressive. It did jar me when she used the phrase “wife beater.” That didn’t seem like Pollyanna. I guess the script is also based on a play being performed at the time. Perhaps it came from that, which would be seen by more adults. This is an hour long, so they did the best they could developing the plot under such a time constraint. As I said, my rating is probably meaningless in this case. I would have rated it lower based only on how entertained I was, but perhaps higher if I knew more about the quality and production value of other silent movies of this era.