A crippled World War I veteran retracts to a small cottage in the countryside to escape from his nosy family and to hide from the outside world. There he meets a plain but also a very kind y... Read allA crippled World War I veteran retracts to a small cottage in the countryside to escape from his nosy family and to hide from the outside world. There he meets a plain but also a very kind young woman. She reveals to him that the house he is staying in is in fact a very old honey... Read allA crippled World War I veteran retracts to a small cottage in the countryside to escape from his nosy family and to hide from the outside world. There he meets a plain but also a very kind young woman. She reveals to him that the house he is staying in is in fact a very old honeymoon cottage. Spirits of newlyweds from the past, who are still swirling through the cotta... Read all
- Awards
- 2 wins
- Maj. Hillgrove
- (as Holmes E. Herbert)
- Little girl in front of cottage
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia(1923). Stage Play: The Enchanted Cottage. Written by Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. Directed by Jessie Bonstelle and William A. Brady. Ritz Theatre: 31 Mar 1923- May 1923 (closing date unknown/65 performances). Cast: Geraldine Ballard (as "Cherub"), Merlin Ballard (as "Imp/Corsellis Child"), Seldon Bennett (as "Rigg"), Clara Blandick (as "Mrs. Minnett/First Witch"), Thomas Broderick (as "First Groom"), Herbert Bunston (as "Rupert Smallwood"), Norman Byron (as "Corsellis Child/Cherub"), Cora Calkins (as "Third Witch"), Elizabeth Collins (as "Bridesmaid"), Katharine Cornell (as "Laura Pennington"), Gertrude Dailey (as "Corsellis Child/Imp"), Dorothy Dorbandt (as "Cherub"), Grace Dougherty (as "Third Bride"), Gilbert Emery (as "Major Murray Hillgrove, D.S.O., M.C."), Francis Fay (as "Cherub"), Winifred Frazer (as "Mrs. Smallwood"), Harry Garwood (as "Cherub"), Gwyneth Gordon (as "Ethel"), Julia Gorman (as "Imp/Corsellis Child"), Roland Hanson (as "Second Groom"), Phyllis Jackson (as "First Bride"), Genevieve Kane (as "Corsellis Child"), Margaret Kastner (as "Cherub"), Stanley Lindahl (as "Third Groom"), Gudrun Mantzius (as "Second Bride"), Harry Neville (as "Rev. Charles Corsellis"), Dorothy Revere (as "Bridesmaid"), George Ryan (as "Corsellis Child"), Helen Ryan (as "Second Witch"), Eileen Smith (as "Cherub"), Noel Tearle (as "Oliver Bashforth"), Dolly Tigue (as "Imp/Corsellis Child"), Ethel Wright (as "Mrs. Corsellis"). Produced by William A. Brady Ltd. Note: Filmed by Inspiration Pictures [distributed by Associated First National Pictures] as The Enchanted Cottage (1924), and by RKO Radio Pictures as The Enchanted Cottage (1945).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood (1980)
The film actor Richard Barthelmess engages me intellectually but not emotionally. I've never yet seen a Barthelmess performance that convinced me he actually was the character he was playing. Yet he always impresses me with the effort he clearly takes in his characterisations. This is especially clear in his best-known role, as the meek Chinese emigrant in 'Broken Blossoms'. Not for one instant did I accept Barthelmess as a Chinese, yet he works hard and impresses me favourably.
In 'The Enchanted Cottage', alas, Bathelmess seems to be doing a bad imitation of Lon Chaney. Barthelmess plays Oliver Bashforth(!), a shell-shocked veteran of the Great War. He was wounded in combat, but the inter-titles are very imprecise about the nature of his injury. As Bashforth, Bathelmess stoops over and wears raccoonish eye makeup. Very distressingly, he keeps making V-signs with both his hands, like some demented Winston Churchill. This is meant to indicate some sort of physical handicap, though I'm not aware of any injury that causes its victim to make V-signs. Harvey Smith syndrome, perhaps? In one scene, Barthelmess crouches in front of a full-length mirror and bitterly confronts his own deformed reflection: he seems to be imitating the scene in 'A Blind Bargain' when Chaney as the Ape-man discovers his own reflection.
The leading lady in this movie is May McAvoy. May McAvoy was one of the most beautiful actresses in silent films. Here, she portrays a plain-faced spinster named Laura Pennington. The makeup artist has given McAvoy an extremely convincing overbite and a putty job to make her face less attractive. I usually dislike it when a beautiful actress is uglified so that she can play a role that could have gone to a less attractive actress. Here, for once, the device is valid.
Bashforth, allegedly deformed by his injuries and wallowing in self-pity, flees to a secluded cottage so he'll have no visitors. His sister Ethel persists in visiting so she can tend him. Bashforth enters into a sham marriage with unattractive Laura, solely as a ploy so that his sister will go away.
Bashforth and Laura discover that the cottage has a long history as a honeymoon cottage; lovers have trysted there for more than two centuries. Gradually, Bashforth and Laura fall in love. As this happens, they subjectively become more attractive. He loses his deformities, whilst Laura becomes more beautiful and starts looking like May McAvoy. The film subtly persuades us that this is a subjective transformation rather than an actual change. Bashforth's and Laura's only neighbour is a retired major (very well played by Holmes Herbert) who's blind, so he 'sees' the couple in terms of their personalities, not their physical appearance.
SPOILERS COMING. All is well until sister Ethel returns with her fiancé Rupert and Rupert's mother. By now, Bashforth and Laura are so good-looking, they could be a couple of matinée idols. When they come down the stairs into the parlour, there is a beautiful dissolve shot as their physical appearance melts back into what it was at the beginning of the film. He is again deformed, she is again plain and buck-toothed.
This is a beautiful and subtle film, made more so because we never quite know how much of this is genuine fantasy, and how much of it merely the fancies of the on-screen characters. But the effect is sadly undercut by some extremely maudlin inter-titles. This was an ongoing hazard of silent films, as the titles were often written by someone completely unrelated to the production of the film in which the titles appeared, and often the tone of the latter contrasted with the former. I'll rate 'The Enchanted Cottage' 7 out of 10.
- F Gwynplaine MacIntyre
- Nov 16, 2004
Details
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1