The House of Darkness
{{short description|1913 film}}
{{distinguish|House of Darkness (disambiguation)}}
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2020}}
{{Infobox film
| name = The House of Darkness
| image = The House of Darkness (1913).webm
| caption = Play film; runtime 00:14:23.
| director = D. W. Griffith
| producer =
| writer = Jere F. Looney
| starring = Lionel Barrymore
| cinematography = G. W. Bitzer
| editing =
| distributor = Biograph Company
| released = {{Film date|1913|05|10}}
| runtime = 14-15 minutes (original film length 1000 feet)
| country = United States
| language = Silent
English intertitles
}}
The House of Darkness is a 1913 American short drama film directed by D. W. Griffith.{{cite web |url=http://www.silentera.com/PSFL/data/H/HouseOfDarkness1913.html |title=Progressive Silent Film List: The House of Darkness |access-date=May 29, 2009|work=Silent Era}}
Plot
In the introduction a woman is shown descending into insanity after having lost her baby. As she mourns, she takes a blanket from the baby's cradle and starts rocking it as if it were her deceased child. This serves as an introduction to what kind of individuals that reside at the mental institution. The doctor at the hospital is also introduced as he proposes to a nurse.
The remainder of the film takes place at the aforementioned setting which hosts several unstable individuals. When violence erupts between two patients; one of them (played by Charles Hill Mailes) escapes the scene in an attempt to avoid capture. At the climax of the chase; the patient is ultimately soothed by the music emitting from a piano in the main hospital building (Lillian Gish in a minor role) and lets himself be taken away by the guards. As he is removed from the vicinity of the music; he once again becomes violent and escapes the grasp of his attendants. After having come upon a gun he makes his way towards the house of the doctor's wife (during this sequence, the perhaps most interesting part of the film seen out of a technical perspective takes place as the lunatic sticks his head out in front of the camera from behind a tree). When the woman discovers him; she becomes terrified. During the farce; the wife puts her hands on the piano by accident, creating a sound which appears pleasing to the lunatic. He urges her to continue, using the gun as a tool of persuasion. She proceeds with the playing which ultimately results in him leaving the house and once again welcomes capture.
The film ends informing the viewer on how music becomes an integral part in aiding mentally unstable individuals.
Cast
- Lionel Barrymore as The Doctor
- Claire McDowell as The Doctor's Wife
- Charles Hill Mailes as The Lunatic aka The 'Unfortunate' Patient
- Lillian Gish as Nurse Playing Piano
- Dorothy Bernard (unconfirmed)
- Adelaide Bronti as In Tenement Apartment
- Kate Bruce as A Patient
- William J. Butler as Extra
- W. Christy Cabanne as Attack Victim
- William Elmer as Asylum Guard (as Billy Elmer)
- Robert Harron as Asylum Guard
- Adolph Lestina as A Patient
- Joseph McDermott as Asylum Guard / Searcher
- Walter Miller as A Clerk
- Frank Opperman as A Patient / A Clerk
- Alfred Paget as Asylum Guard
- W.C. Robinson as Asylum Guard
- Henry B. Walthall
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title|id=0002985|title=The House of Darkness}}
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-UsGu6foLk The House of Darkness] on YouTube
- The House of Darkness available for download at [https://archive.org/details/HouseOfDarkness Archive.org]
{{D. W. Griffith |state=collapsed}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:House Of Darkness, The}}
Category:1910s English-language films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:Articles containing video clips
Category:Biograph Company films
Category:Short films directed by D. W. Griffith
Category:Silent American drama short films