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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| THE HOODLUM (THE RAGAMUFFIN) (director: Sidney A. Franklin; screenwriter: Frances Marion/Bernard McConville/Julie Mathilde Lippmann/from the Julie Mathilde Lippmann novel Burkeses Amy; cinematographer: Charles Rosher; editor: Edward McDermott; cast: Amy Burke (Mary Pickford), Alexander Guthrie (Ralph Lewis), John Graham (Kenneth Harlan), Dish Lowry (Melvin Messenger), John Burke (Dwight Crittendon), Nora (Aggie Herring), Pat O'Shaughnessy (Andrew Arbuckle), Abram Isaacs (Max Davidson); Runtime: 78; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Mary Pickford; Milestone Films; 1919-silent) |
| "An unappealing melodrama from the
silent era."
Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Sidney
A. Franklin ("Private Lives"/"The Good Earth"/"The
Barretts of Wimpole Street") directs for First
National an unappealing melodrama from
the silent era. It's Alexander
Guthrie (Ralph Lewis) is a wealthy and ruthless
businessman, who lives in a mansion in the ritzy Park
Avenue section of Manhattan with his spoiled and moody
granddaughter Amy Burke (Mary Pickford). They
get into a verbal spat when Amy at the last moment
refuses to go with gramps to Europe on a vacation and
returns to live with her respected
sociologist researcher father (Dwight
Crittendon), at work studying living conditions
in the slums to finish his treatise, while
dwelling in a run-down tenement in a Lower East Side
slum. The lifestyle change first frightens the
ambiguously aged teen, but she adjusts to her new
rough neighborhood by making friends with
street-wise kids--the rough-house Pat
O'Shaughnessy (Andrew Arbuckle, cousin of Fatty)
and crap-shooter Abram Issacs (Max Davidson) and
the mysterious artist ex-con John Graham
(Kenneth Harlan). The street kids
survive by doing petty crimes, while the neighborhood
is overwhelmed with squalor and deplorable living
conditions. When Amy becomes romantically interested
in John, she learns he was imprisoned after he was
made the scapegoat for a shady financial deal
undertaken by her grandfather. To get proof he was
innocent and not an embezzler, Amy disguises herself
as a boy and with John they break into her
grandfather's residence. They find papers to clear
John, but are caught. Gramps has a change of heart and
doesn't press charges, convinced the energetic Amy has
matured and learned to be kind and care about others.
In the end everything is made right again ,allowing
the lovebirds to marry and presumably live happily
ever after. REVIEWED ON 1/28/2013 GRADE: C+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |