The Captive (1915 film)
{{Short description|1915 film}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2020}}
{{Infobox film
| name = The Captive
| image = TheCaptive-19150pamphletfront.jpg
| caption = Front of a pamphlet for the film
| director = Cecil B. DeMille
| producer = Cecil B. DeMille
Jesse L. Lasky
| writer = Cecil B. DeMille
Jeanie MacPherson
| story = Cecil B. DeMille
| starring = Blanche Sweet
| cinematography = Alvin Wyckoff
| editing = Cecil B. DeMille
| studio = Jesse Lasky Feature Plays
| distributor = Paramount Pictures
| released = {{film date|1915|4|22}}
| runtime = 50 minutes
| country = United States
| language = Silent
English intertitles
| budget = $12,153.54{{cite book|last=Birchard|first=Robert S. |title=Cecil B. DeMille's Hollywood|year=2004|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|isbn=0-813-12324-0|page=44}}
| gross = $56,074.88{{cite magazine|url=https://archive.org/details/variety90-1928-03/page/n132/mode/1up?q=%22picture+cost%22|magazine=Variety|date=21 March 1928|title=De Mille's Costs-Gross|accessdate=20 March 2023|page=5}}
}}
File:The Captive (1915) by Cecil B. DeMille.webm
The Captive is an American silent-era film released on April 22, 1915. It was released on five reels.{{Cite web|title = Motion Picture News - Lantern: Search, Visualize & Explore the Media History Digital Library|url = http://lantern.mediahist.org/catalog/motionpicturenew112unse_1394|website = lantern.mediahist.org|access-date = November 19, 2015}} The film was written, directed, edited, and produced by Cecil B. DeMille. Jesse L. Lasky was another producer and Jeanie MacPherson worked with DeMille to write the screenplay. The film is based on a play written by Cecil B. DeMille and Jeanie MacPherson. The Captive grossed over $56,000{{Cite book|title=Cecil B. DeMille's Hollywood|last=Birchard|first=Robert|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|year=2004|location=Lexington, Kentucky|pages=44–46}} on a budget of $12,154.{{Citation|last=DeMille|first=Cecil B.|title=The Captive|date=April 22, 1915|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0005059/business?ref_=tt_dt_bus|access-date=October 4, 2016}} Blanche Sweet stars as Sonia Martinovich, alongside House Peters who stars as Mahmud Hassan. The film details the romantic war-era plight of Sonia and her lover Mahmud.
Plot
File:Motionpicturenew112unse 0055.jpg
The Captive chronicles the life of a young woman named Sonia Martinovitch (Blanche Sweet) who lived during the midst of the Balkan Wars. She lives close to the Turkish border on a small farm in Montenegro with her older brother Marko Martinovich (Page Peters) and younger brother Milo (Gerald Ward). Nearby, a Turkish nobleman by the name of Mahmud Hassan (House Peters) lives in a lavish palace. Marko is killed in the Battle of Lüleburgaz, leaving Martinovich and Milo helpless. Subsequently, Hassan is taken prisoner, and assigned to the Martinovich's farm to help with the chores Sonia is unable to complete without her brother.
At first, Sonia holds Hassan captive with the use of her bullwhip{{Cite web|title = Motion Picture News - Lantern: Search, Visualize & Explore the Media History Digital Library|url = http://lantern.mediahist.org/catalog/motionpicturenew112unse_0421|website = lantern.mediahist.org|access-date = November 19, 2015}} and forces him to get water, bake, and plow the fields. Hassan begins to befriend young Milo to alleviate his humiliation and suffering. Gradually, Sonia warms up to him and they fall deeply in love.
The war wages on, and the Ottomans recapture the village where Sonia, Hassan and Milo live. A drunken officer (William Elmer) tries to force himself on Martinovich, but she refuses. Fueled by love, Hassan intervenes, despite the fact that the officer is Turkish. When the Ottoman army is driven out of the village, Hassan returns home to find that he has been stripped of his title, his land has been taken, and he has been banished from his homeland, all for thwarting the drunken officer's attack on Sonia. Meanwhile, at the farm, a pack of unruly scavengers have burned the Martinovich family's modest house, forcing them to abandon their home. The siblings meet Hassan on the road, and the lovebirds and Milo walk off to begin a new life together.{{Cite web|title = The Captive (1915) - Overview - TCM.com|url = https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/493020/the-captive/|website = Turner Classic Movies|access-date = November 19, 2015}}
Cast
- Blanche Sweet as Sonya Martinovich
- House Peters as Muhamud Hassan
- Page Peters as Marko
- Theodore Roberts as The Burgomaster
- Gerald Ward as Milos Martinovich
- Jeanie MacPherson as Milka
- Marjorie Daw
- William Elmer as Turkish Officer
- Tex Driscoll
- Raymond Hatton as Turkish Soldier (uncredited)
Notable people
=The Famous Players–Lasky Corporation=
The director, Cecil B. DeMille, and producer, Jesse L. Lasky, are both associated with Famous Players–Lasky Corporation, dubbed “the world’s greatest motion picture enterprise, … [for] it is the organization which has made the motion picture”,{{Cite book|title = The Story of The Famous Players–Lasky Corporation|publisher = Paramount-Artcraft Motion Pictures|year = 1919|location = New York}} its membership included President Adolph Zukor, First Vice President Jesse L. Lasky, Director-General Cecil B. DeMille, Vice Presidents Frank A. Garbott and Walter E. Greene, Treasurer Arthur S. Friend, and Secretary Elek J. Ludvigh. Together, they churned out 731 feature films, and 363 single-reel shorts in conjunction with Paramount. They did this between the years of 1916 and 1919. Blanche Sweet starred in 19 of the films produced by this organization.
=Blanche Sweet=
Paramount utilized Sweet's star power to lure audiences into their late-spring release. They claimed their films were just as great as Broadway stage productions, yet with a never ending season.{{Cite web|title = Motion Picture News - Lantern: Search, Visualize & Explore the Media History Digital Library|url = http://lantern.mediahist.org/catalog/motionpicturenew112unse_0953|website = lantern.mediahist.org|access-date = November 19, 2015}} The praise from the press could partially be due to Sweet's familiarity with her co-star, House Peters, as they worked together on another film called Warrens of Virginia.{{Cite web|title = Motion Picture News - Lantern: Search, Visualize & Explore the Media History Digital Library|url = http://lantern.mediahist.org/catalog/motionpicturenew112unse_0055|website = lantern.mediahist.org|access-date = November 19, 2015}} Warrens of Virginia was directed and produced by the same team. Additionally, Motion Picture News claimed that “Blanche Sweet has scored the greatest success of her entire career in the photodramatization.” The sets and scenes were described as “elaborate … [and] produced with extreme realism.” DeMille's obsession with realism backfired when an extra, Charles Chandler, was shot and killed by a gun used as a prop on set. Later on, Blanche Sweet confessed that DeMille encouraged extras to use real bullets instead of blanks to create more realistic battle scenes.
Sweet was not a fan of DeMille off screen. She starred in two feature films with DeMille (The Captive and Warrens of Virginia) and had a negative experience during both. She described her time with DeMille as “‘... a terrible time’ ... [she] was terrified of him.” {{Cite book|title = Silent Players a Biographical and Autobiographical Study of 100 Silent Film Actors and Actresses|last = Slide|first = Anthony|publisher = University Press of Kentucky|year = 2010|location = Lexington, Kentucky}} Sweet felt he was strange, but DeMille spun the story to make it sound like he was the one terrified of her. Although Sweet and DeMille didn’t quite click, she had a much better experience with his brother, William C. DeMille, “who, ‘had a more subtle way of doing things.’” She worked with William on three films, The Ragamuffin, The Blacklist, and The Sowers. These films were all released in 1916. DeMille then continued on to direct 70 more films throughout his career.
=Cecil B. DeMille=
Jeanie MacPherson acted in several of Cecil B. DeMille films and "became his favorite screenwriter. “Macpherson came to the Lasky studio after being fired from Universal for going over schedule on one of her short productions.” MacPherson and DeMille worked well together, mostly due to their love of melodrama. In this example of their work, it is apparent that The Captive was designed with the intention of reusing costumes from an earlier film called The Unafraid. Both films share the same Eastern European setting and both leading ladies fall in love with their enemies.
Preservation status
The film was thought to be lost until it was rediscovered in 1970 in the Paramount Pictures Vault and later donated to the Library of Congress where the complete 35 mm copy is now held.Catalog of Holdings The American Film Institute Collection and The United Artists Collection at The Library of Congress, (<-book title) p.26 c.1978 by the American Film Institute{{cite web |url=https://memory.loc.gov/diglib/ihas/loc.mbrs.sfdb.1713/ |title=American Silent Feature Film Database: The Captive |access-date=March 30, 2024 |publisher=Library of Congress}}
See also
- The House That Shadows Built (1931, 20 year anniversary promotional film by Paramount Pictures)
- List of rediscovered films
- Blanche Sweet filmography
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|The Captive (1915 film)}}
- {{IMDb title|id=0005059|title=The Captive}}
- [http://50.28.105.0/product/the-captive/ The Captive] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170113165556/http://50.28.105.0/product/the-captive/ |date=January 13, 2017 }} at Olive Films
{{Cecil B. DeMille}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Captive (1915 film), The}}
Category:1915 romantic drama films
Category:1910s English-language films
Category:1910s rediscovered films
Category:1910s war drama films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:American films based on plays
Category:American silent feature films
Category:Articles containing video clips
Category:English-language romantic drama films
Category:English-language war drama films
Category:Films directed by Cecil B. DeMille
Category:Paramount Pictures films
Category:Rediscovered American films
Category:Silent American romantic drama films
Category:Silent American war drama films