Lady of the Night

Lady of the Night

1925 ""
Lady of the Night
Lady of the Night

Lady of the Night

6.7 | 1h10m | en | Drama

The story of two baby girls, born near in proximity, but worlds apart in life: Molly Helmer, the daughter of a thief, and Florence Banning, the daughter of the judge who would send Molly's father to prison. The girls' lives come together as young women at eighteen as Florence leaves the security of the exclusive Girls Select School, and Molly, now orphaned, begins her life free from reform school.

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6.7 | 1h10m | en | Drama , Romance | More Info
Released: February. 23,1925 | Released Producted By: Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corporation , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

The story of two baby girls, born near in proximity, but worlds apart in life: Molly Helmer, the daughter of a thief, and Florence Banning, the daughter of the judge who would send Molly's father to prison. The girls' lives come together as young women at eighteen as Florence leaves the security of the exclusive Girls Select School, and Molly, now orphaned, begins her life free from reform school.

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Cast

Norma Shearer , Malcolm McGregor , Dale Fuller

Director

Cedric Gibbons

Producted By

Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corporation ,

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wes-connors Before he is taken away in handcuffs, a father says farewell to his newborn baby girl. The unfortunate man is sentenced to 20 years in the penitentiary, by a judge who also has a newborn baby girl. The convict's baby grows up in poverty; the judge's daughter grows up wealthy. Eighteen years later, pretty débutante Norma Shearer (as Florence Banning) graduates from an exclusive finishing school. In a dual role, attractive delinquent Norma Shearer (as Molly Helmer) graduates from a girls' reform school. The central role Ms. Shearer plays in "Lady of the Night" is the latter one - "Molly" the lower class young woman..."Molly" dates underworld pipsqueak George K. Arthur (as "Chunky" Dunn). She wears a feathered hat that looks like it would strike you blind if Shearer turned her head suddenly. She receives some unwanted attention from a sleazy man. A very handsome young inventor, Malcolm McGregor (as David "Dave" Page), intervenes and saves Shearer. She is smitten. He is interested as well, but Mr. McGregor later meets Shearer's "Florence" - and they begin to date. This makes "Molly" sad. She will have to either fight for Mr. McGregor or let him find happiness with "Florence" the more socially suitable mate...In 2006, "Lady of the Night" was been beautifully restored for broadcast on Turner Classic Movies (TCM). This version runs 61 minutes, which suggests at least one reel's worth of running time is missing. Still, the film plays beautifully. It's possible that something implying prostitution was cut as the title "Lady of the Night" suggests this - but there is no explicit evidence in the feature. Jon Mirsalis' new musical score is marvelous, accompanying the visuals without being obvious. Shearer and director Monta Bell work wonderfully together. One of the most poetic scenes is Mr. Arthur's attempt to touch a ray of light, arriving via a hole in Shearer's window shade...Watch for a very brief glimpse of Joan Crawford's profile in the scene where Shearer hugs Shearer. Soon to join Shearer as an MGM super-star, Ms. Crawford served as body double, due to the star playing two roles. There aren't a lot of scenes involving Shearer and Crawford. Due to the feature film's short running time, it's possible some missing footage involved the two actresses. It's also possible some unknown connection between "Molly" and "Florence" was intended; in the present version, there is no connection made and their resemblance is not noted. Nice to see Kellogg's frosted corn flakes, too. If you aren't sure about "silent" feature films, this is an appealing taste.******** Lady of the Night (2/23/25) Monta Bell ~ Norma Shearer, Malcolm McGregor, George K. Arthur, Joan Crawford
Neil Doyle TCM is showing a very crisp print of LADY OF THE NIGHT, tinted throughout in shades of blue, yellow, orange, sepia, etc. and giving it a more interesting look than most of the B&W films of that era. It's accompanied by a very perky score by Jon Mirsalis that captures the feel of the story with style.NORMA SHEARER has the chance to play two roles, a poor girl from the wrong side of the tracks and a rich society girl--with both of them in love with leading man MALCOM McGREGOR. The stories are blended because the poor girl is the daughter of a criminal sentenced to life in prison and the rich girl is the daughter of the judge who sentenced him.Camera work is marvelous in scenes where Shearer acts with herself, technically excellent in the manner the actress is photographed for the dual scenes. Particularly clever is the use of tinted photography to make the story more vivid.For Shearer fans, this is a must see since this is really a minor gem in her career. She's equally convincing as Molly, the gum-chewing gal who knows she's not respectable enough to win the love of the inventor she has helped, and the quiet and thoughtful rich girl who realizes that poor Molly really has first claim on McGregor's heart.The ending manages to be a mixture of sadness and brightness, a satisfying conclusion to an interesting and poignant tale about the whims of true love when it comes to wealth and poverty.
FerdinandVonGalitzien During the silent film era there were many important and famous directors who contributed with their mastery to the greatness of s film art but there were also other remarkable but not well-known film directors who also made good films. These interesting oeuvres unfortunately made little impact and are often not remembered in spite of their artistic merits. The American film director Herr Monta Bell was responsible for a number of these good (though not great) movies.This Herr Graf likes specially Herr Bell's films, little pieces of craftsmanship in the silent era, perfectly planned and never disappointing. Herr Bell was influenced in his directorial style by Herr Ernst Lubitsch ( beside working with Herr Charles Chaplin ) and it is possible to see this in many of his films; elegant comedies, sometimes as sophisticated as the Herr Lubitsch ones, not with the German director's touch, certainly, but elegant, stylish and displaying an ironic sense of humour, anyway."Lady Of The Night" is not one of those remarkable Herr Bell's stylish comedies but it is certainly a good film, one of those Herr Bell's small pictures, brief but intense and with excellent final artistic results. The film depicts the story of two women from very different backgrounds; Dame Molly Hellmer and Dame Florence Banning, both played by Dame Norma Shearer in a double role. They are in love with the same youngster, a successful inventor who has a complicated task on his hands; he must sell his invention and pick the girl he will spend the rest of his life with.The parallel stories and the different backgrounds of the two women, are depicted in detail and there is an excellent performance by Dame Shearer who expertly captures the different gestures and habits in the way both women face life; it's a "tour de force" and even though it seems simple it is actually complex. The film is also perfectly balanced, with witty editing showing transitions from Dame Molly to Dame Florence, especially at the beginning of the film. With skill and craftsmanship the film narrative goes from to a barroom dance to a luxurious mansion very smoothly, reflecting different social realities that have only one thing in common: the sufferings of love.Herr Bell knows (as does this German count) that different social classes cannot be mixed and that's what happens in "Lady Of The Night" but in order not to disillusion the audience and keep them dreaming those impossible dreams, Herr Bell includes some humour and also an ironic and cynical ending, as happens in many of Herr Bell's films. After all, those two different girls are realistic not foolish ones and know pretty well what the future has in store for them.And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must drink a double cocktail.Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/
hcoursen The strength of this one is the way the camera tells the story -- beautifully. The film justifies the artistry often claimed for silent films. The weakness of the film is the story itself. It starts out like "A Place in the Sun" (George Stevens' great film of 1951), with an ambitious young man loved by a lower class woman and an aristocrat. Dreiser's 'An American Tragedy,'on which the Stevens film was based was published in the year of 'Woman of the Night' (1925). But the film becomes conventional, when Molly decides that Chunky will at least be a lot of laughs. The fact that the two women do look alike, in spite of the makeup and garish costumes that Norma's Molly wears, is not exploited. The "double story" a la 'Dorian Gray,' 'Jeykll and Hyde,' Poe's 'William Wilson,' Dostoyevski's 'The Double,' James' 'Jolly Corner,' and Conrad's 'The Duel' is not told, so there's no point in having Shearer play both women. In fact, Joan Crawford, who must have just changed her name from Lucille LeSueur, plays Molly when the two women are on screen. I wonder how Crawford felt later, when Shearer got all the parts that Thalberg bought for her during the early days of talkies. Crawford told us when she commented on Shearer and Howard in the 1936 'Romeo and Juliet': "I couldn't wait for those two old turkeys to die -- could you?"