The Village Blacksmith (1922 film)

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The Village Blacksmith
File:The Village Blacksmith FilmPoster.jpeg
Film poster
Directed by John Ford
Produced by William Fox
Written by Paul Sloane[1]
Based on "The Village Blacksmith"
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Starring Will Walling
Virginia True Boardman
Cinematography George Schneiderman[2]
Production
company
Distributed by Fox Film Corporation
Release dates
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  • November 2, 1922 (1922-11-02) (New York)[3]
Running time
8 reels[4] (approx. 80 mins)
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

The Village Blacksmith is a 1922 American silent melodrama[5][6] film directed by John Ford and produced and distributed by Fox Film Corporation. One of the eight reels survives at the UCLA Film and Television Archive, and therefore the film is considered to be lost.[7][8] It was loosely adapted from the poem of the same name by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.[3]

Plot

As young men, the squire (Marshall) and the village blacksmith (Walling) are in love with the same woman (Boardman), whom the blacksmith marries. This angers the squire. Years later, the squire's son Anson (Yearsley) dares the blacksmith's son Johnnie (Hackathorne) to climb a tree, from which he falls and is crippled.

As adults, Anson and the blacksmith's daughter Alice (Valli) fall in love, which angers the blacksmith, who chastises his daughter. The blacksmith's other son Bill (Butler) returns from college and is injured in a train accident. Anson steals $840 from a church fund which is currently in Alice's possession. Alice is struck by lightning. The blacksmith take Anson and the squire to church where they both repent.[5][9][10]

Cast

File:William Walling in The Village Blacksmith.jpg
William Walling in the title role

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Reception

The film was well received by audiences[11] and by reviewers alike.[4][12][13] The photography was highly praised.[6][14]

References

Citations
  1. Davis 1997, p. 346
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  11. Davis 1997, p. 48
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Works cited
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External links