The Springtime of Life (1912) Poster

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5/10
More Interesting For Two Of The Performers Than As A Movie
boblipton30 May 2020
It all begins with a woman dying. Her husband. Georg af Klercker, walked out on her and their little girlsome time ago, but she send him a letter and the child anyway. He's an important man, a councillor, and doesn't have time for a child, so he sends her to Astrid Engelbrecht for rearing. She, in turn, sells the child to a man who sends her out to beg. When Victor Sjöström sees her and reads a story about Miss Engelbrecht, he takes her home to be reared by mother.

That's Act 1. In the second act, the child has grown up to be Selma Wiklund af Klercker, who falls for lodger Mauritz Stiller's line of malarkey. The two future directors have a duel, and Miss Engelbrecht runs away in shame. We know, however, that a surprising number of these people will coincidentally run into each other in Act III, where there will be Surprising Revelations.

Stiller and Sjöström are, of course, two of the best known Swedish directors of the Silent era, so it's interesting to watch them in front of the camera. They're tall, good-looking men who strike their poses well, but given the rather melodramatic story and direction of Paul Garbagni in his first feature, it's more concentrated on telling the story than allowing the actors to do anything interesting. The set-piece duel is rather rushed through, and a theater fire likewise, in order that we be told what is happening via handwritten notes.

this is one of those movies that went missing for eighty or ninety years, only to turn up at the Cinemateque Francaise. It lacked titles, so it had to be restored, and a good job of work was done on that. Still, it's mainly interesting for the two men in front of the camera who would move behind it.
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three great men is a poor but fascinating film
kekseksa21 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This is not a wonderful film but it is a wonderful film to have a restored copy of. While the French director was only really known for the detective series Nick Winter, he has an embarrassment of future great directors in his cast - Af Klerker, Sjöström and Stiller and he has the priceless Swedish cinematographer Julius Jaenzon.

The film is a rather typically lugubrious Swedish melodrama. A dying woman entrusts her daughter Gerda to her father (a playboy dignitary who has abandoned the mother) played by Af Klerker. He accepts the responsibility but fosters her out to a woman whose husband runs a begging racket. The couple pretend to the father that she has run away and set her to work. A young man (Alm) who has read about the racket (played by Sjöström) takes an interest, tracks down the "Fagin" and tries to pay to find out her identity. The couple try to cheat him but he succeeds in leaving with the girl and lodges her with his mother who is happy to adopt her.

In the second act, twelve years have passed. Alm of course has fallen in love with his protégée (now played by Mme Af Klerker) but a triangle is formed when the family accept a dashing young army officer as a lodger (played by Stiller). Despite his initial pretence of gravity - the film is all about people seeming what they are not - he too turns out to be a frivolous playboy who persuades her of his love but has no intention of marrying her. Alm learns of his rival's duplicity and proves it to the girl but the exposure results in the officer challenging him to a duel. He is slightly injured but, worse still, Gerda has decided to leave home.

In the third act, ten years later, the father, as much a playboy as ever, is in pursuit of a young actress who turns out of course to be his daughter Gerda who has gone on the stage under an assumed name after leaving the Alms. Alm however has also seen the actress and recognised his "little sister". The villainous foster-mother (the only one to know the secret of her identity) is also now working as a dresser at the theatre (unrecognised by Gerda, reads her correspondence with Alm and realises who she is. She in any case rejects the older man's advances (even though she does not yet know he is her father). When a fire breaks out in the theatre and she is trapped by the flames, Alm comes to the rescue, the injured and dying villainess confesses all and, after one further little twist, everything is suitably resolved.

Interestingly a great deal of the information in the film is conveyed by letters, a style of "epistolary film" that was enjoying a certain success in France (see particularly Perret's Roman d'un mousse for a much cleverer example of the genre).

This is all rather creaky, predictable stuff, packed with absurd coincidence, and of nothing like the quality of film that the three Swedes would soon themselves be producing but it is fascinating to see them together here as actors in such an early full-length feature and Jaenzon's cinematography provides some good moments.
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It provides real entertainment
deickemeyer20 October 2017
This fine three-part picture is notable not only for its good story, fine settings and excellent acting, but for the quality of its photography and its light effects. The latter factor is of so pronounced a value that it will be noticed by those who usually give little heed to anything but the story and its working out. The picture also is valuable as furnishing another answer to the question: Why multiple reels? It comes on a day when the regular program of the licensed companies is weak and colorless; it provides real entertainment. No one will deny that in a company producing single and multiple-reel pictures the standard of quality of the latter is higher. In "The Springtime of Life" there is a well-staged theater fire. - The Moving Picture World, August 16, 1913
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