- Comradeship (1919 film)
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Comradeship Directed by Maurice Elvey Produced by Maurice Elvey Written by Jeffrey Bernerd
Louis N. ParkerStarring Lily Elsie
Gerald Ames
Guy NewallCinematography Paul Burger Studio Stoll Film Company Release date(s) January 1919 Running time 6000 feet Country United Kingdom Language English Comradeship is a 1919 British silent film drama, directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Lily Elsie, Gerald Ames and Guy Newall. The film's action covers the entire span of World War I, from the months before the outbreak of hostilities to the declaration of peace.
Contents
Background
Comradeship was the first feature production by the Stoll Film Company, founded in April 1918 by theatrical manager Oswald Stoll. Stoll was a well-known philanthropist who had been instrumental during World War I in setting up a charity to create homes for disabled soldiers, and campaigned to publicise the plight of blinded ex-servicemen. The film's storyline mirrored these interests, and was also one of the first to examine the social impact of the war on Britain in the respect that common cause and experience had caused a sea-change in British society, challenging and eroding traditional class-based assumptions.
Filming on Comradeship began in the summer of 1918 while the war was still in progress, and it was still in production when the Armistice was signed in November. Elvey took the opportunity to incorporate authentic footage of victory celebrations in London and some of his characters in the setting of the city in the immediate aftermath of war, lending these sections of the film a historical documentary feel.[1]
Plot
Pacifist John Armstrong (Ames) runs a drapery store in the small town of Melcombe, helped by his apprentice Peggy (Peggy Carlisle) and German assistant Otto (Dallas Cairns), who are having an affair. Local landowner Lieutenant Baring (Newall) finds Otto a suspicious character, but is angrily assured by John that he is trustworthy. Armstrong is attracted to Baring's cousin Betty (Elsie), who plans to turn their home, Fanshawe Hall, into a wounded soldiers' hospital on the inevitable outbreak of war between Britain and Germany.
Otto leaves John a note stating his allegiance to Germany, and fails to return to work after the 1914 August bank holiday. Peggy is distraught as she is carrying his child. She is disowned by her family, but Betty hears of the situation and offers shelter to Peggy at Fanshawe.
War breaks out, and injured serviceman start to arrive at Fanshawe. John visits to offer a charitable donation, and starts to tell Betty how he feels about her, but is deflated when Betty explains that running the hospital takes up all of her time and she cannot think of romance. Despite his pacifist inclinations, John finally enlists in the army. At the training camp he becomes fast friends with the cheery working-class Ginger (Teddy Arundell) and the pair admit their trepidation to each other. As the regiment leaves for the front, Betty turns up to wish John goodbye and good luck, and they embrace.
While John fights in the trenches, Peggy suffers a miscarriage. She decides to become a nurse and help Betty at Fanshawe. John comes home on leave and is upset to see Betty handing her locket to Baring as a keepsake. Ginger arrives in Melcombe to visit. As he is out walking, he sees Peggy being harassed by a man and steps in to rescue her. They begin to fall in love, but before Peggy can be honest with Ginger about her past, Ginger and John are recalled to action.
On the battlefield Baring is attacked by Otto, who is killed by Ginger. Ginger is shocked when he finds a picture of Peggy in Otto's pocket. John is moving the badly-wounded Baring to safety when he finds Betty's locket. For a moment he considers leaving Baring to die, but comes to his senses and continues dragging Baring to shelter. A shell explodes nearby, and John is blinded. He is repatriated and sent to Fanshawe to be nursed.
The Armistice is signed. Ginger visits Melcombe again, but refuses to have anything to do with Peggy. Baring reveals that Betty gave him her locket for him to pass on to John, but for one reason or another he forgot about it. John now realises that Betty does not love Baring, but refuses to advance his own suit as he does not want her to feel she has to commit herself to a blind man out of sympathy. Betty is hurt by John's apparent lack of interest. Peggy intercedes, telling John he must be honest with Betty about his love for her. He refuses, but manages to effect a happy reconciliation between Peggy and Ginger.
As society begins to recover from the war, John feels adrift and unsure what to do with his future. He learns of a network of Comrades Clubs set up by ex-serviceman, and finds purpose by setting up a branch in Melcombe. Ginger and Peggy have married, and come down for the grand opening of the club. On the big day, Betty decides that if John will not make the running, she will ask him to marry her. He agrees, and later receives the good news that he can have an operation which will restore his sight.
Cast
- Lily Elsie as Betty Mortimer
- Gerald Ames as John Armstrong
- Guy Newall as Lt. Baring
- Teddy Arundell as Ginger
- Peggy Carlisle as Peggy
- Dallas Cairns as Liebeman
- Kate Gurney as Housekeeper
References
- ^ Comradeship (1919) BFI Screen Online. Retrieved 09-10-2010
External links
- Comradeship at the Internet Movie Database
- Comradeship at BFI Film & TV Database
The films of Maurice Elvey 1910s Popsy Wopsy (1913) • Maria Marten (1913) • The White Feather (1914) • Her Luck in London (1914) • The Loss of the Birkenhead (1914) • The Idol of Paris (1914) • The Suicide Club (1914) • Honeymoon for Three (1915) • There's Good in Everyone (1915) • Gilbert Dying to Die (1915) • Home (1915) • Her Nameless Child (1915) • Love in a Wood (1915) • From Shopgirl to Duchess (1915) • Gilbert Gets Tiger-Itis (1915) • Midshipman Easy (1915) • Fine Feathers (1915) • Florence Nightingale (1915) • A Will of Her Own (1915) • Charity Ann (1915) • When Knights Were Bold (1916) • Driven (1916) • Mother Love (1916) • Meg the Lady (1916) • Esther (1916) • Trouble for Nothing (1916) • Vice Versa (1916) • The Princess of Happy Chance (1916) • The King's Daughter (1916) • The Woman Who Was Nothing (1917) • The Grit of a Jew (1917) • Smith (1917) • Justice (1917) • The Gay Lord Quex (1917) • Flames (1917) • Mary Girl (1917) • The Life Story of David Lloyd George (1918) • Hindle Wakes (1918) • Nelson (1918) • The Greatest Wish in the World (1918) • Goodbye (1918) • Adam Bede (1918) • Comradeship (1919) • God's Good Man (1919) • Mr. Wu (1919) • The Elusive Pimpernel (1919) • Quinneys (1919) • The Rocks of Valpre (1919) • Keeper of the Door (1919) • The Swindler (1919) • Dombey and Son (1919)1920s The Tavern Knight (1920) • The Victory Leaders (1920) • A Question of Trust (1920) • At the Villa Rose (1920) • The Hundredth Chance (1920) • The Amateur Gentleman (1920) • Bleak House (1920) • Innocent (1921) • The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1921) • A Gentleman of France (1921) • A Romance of Wastdale (1921) • The Fruitful Vine (1921) • Dick Turpin's Ride to York (1922) • A Debt of Honour (1922) • Running Water (1922) • Man and His Kingdom (1922) • The Hound of the Baskervilles (1922) • Don Quixote (1923) • Guy Fawkes (1923) • The Royal Oak (1923) • The Wandering Jew (1923) • The Sign of Four (1923) • The Passionate Friends (1923)• Sally Bishop (1924) • Henry, King of Navarre (1924) • Slaves of Destiny (1924) • The Love Story of Aliette Brunton (1924) • My Husband's Wives (1924) • Folly of Vanity (1924) • Curlytop (1924) • She Wolves (1925) • Every Man's Wife (1925) • The Woman Tempted (1926) • The Flag Lieutenant (1926) • Human Law (1927) • Roses of Picardy (1927) • Hindle Wakes (1927) • The Flight Commander (1927) • Quinneys (1927) • Mademoiselle Parley Voo (1928) • Balaclava (1928) • Mademoiselle from Armentieres (1928)• Palais de danse (1928) • You Know What Sailors Are (1928) • The Glad Eye (1929) • High Treason (1929)1930s School for Scandal (1930) • Potiphar's Wife (1931) • Sally in Our Alley (1931) • A Honeymoon Adventure (1931) • Frail Women (1932) • The Marriage Bond (1932) • The Water Gipsies (1932) • Diamond Cut Diamond (1932) • The Lodger (1932) • The Lost Chord (1933) • I Lived with You (1933) • This Week of Grace (1933) • The Wandering Jew (1933) • Lily of Killarney (1934) • Love, Life and Laughter (1934) • Princess Charming (1934) • Soldiers of the King (1934) • My Song for You (1934) • Road House (1934) • In a Monastery Garden (1935) • Heat Wave (1935) • The Clairvoyant (1935) • The Tunnel (1935) • Spy of Napoleon (1936) • Man in the Mirror (1936) • A Romance in Flanders (1937) • Change for a Sovereign (1937) • Who Killed John Savage? (1937) • Melody and Romance (1937) • Lightning Conductor (1938) • Who Goes Next? (1938) • The Return of the Frog (1938) • A People Eternal (1939) • Sword of Honour (1939) • Sons of the Sea (1939)1940s Under Your Hat (1940) • The Spider (1940) • For Freedom (1940) • Room for Two (1940) • Salute John Citizen (1942) • The Lamp Still Burns (1943) • Strawberry Roan (1944) • Medal for the General (1944) • Beware of Pity (1946)1950s The Third Visitor (1951) • The Late Edwina Black (1951) • My Wife's Lodger (1952) • The Great Game (1953) • Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary? (1953) • The Harassed Hero (1954) • The Happiness of Three Women (1954) • What Every Woman Wants (1954) • The Gay Dog (1954) • You Lucky People (1955) • Room in the House (1955) • Fun at St. Fanny's (1956) House of Blackmail (1956) • Dry Rot (1956) • Second Fiddle (1957) • Stars in Your Eyes (1957)Categories:- British films
- 1919 films
- 1910s drama films
- British silent films
- Films directed by Maurice Elvey
- Western Front films (World War I)
- Black-and-white films
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