The Godless Girl (1928) Poster

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7/10
"Intolerance versus intolerance"
Steffi_P24 January 2009
Anyone who has seen a handful of Cecil B. DeMille pictures will be able to see that they are often contradictory on many levels, and can take some bizarre turns. In the Godless Girl – his last silent feature – an exaggerated and ill-informed attack upon atheism turns into what is for its era a rather grittily authentic portrayal of a penal institution.

Interestingly, the opening scenes show how fundamentalists such as DeMille and his screenwriter Jeanie MacPherson seem only able to picture atheists as having a ritualism and desire to convert similar to that of a religious group. It's also indicative of DeMille's fundamentalism that there are rarely actual arguments for belief in his pictures – just a sprinkling of quotations from scripture, a dash of Old Testament pyrotechnics and a reverent depiction of religious figures. Here that last tactic is reversed, with the unbelievers appearing as ridiculous caricatures, their tenets belittled rather than tackled. However the Godless Girl is rare among DeMille pictures in that it does contain a passing reference to an actual philosophical argument for the existence of God, one known as the argument from beauty. But this is rather overshadowed by DeMille's preferred method – to dazzle us with miracles. So we have cross-shaped burns appearing on Lina Basquette's hands, or Tom Keene's prayer being answered in the form of a falling electrical cable in the climactic fire sequence.

In contrast to this DeMillean theism is the thoroughly researched realism of the reformatory. Depictions of suffering and sadism do crop up quite a bit in DeMille's pictures, but they were rarely this convincing and this close to home. Particularly effective is the simplicity and relentlessness of the sequence in which Keene is tortured with a fire hose by the brutish Noah Beery. Beery is of course another caricature, but the starkness of the setting and the naturalism of the extras prevent this from becoming anything like a Sunday-school portrayal of Hebrew slaves toiling under the whip.

DeMille and MacPherson would probably not have regarded these changes in tone as inconsistent, and there is in fact one consistency in the Godless Girl that we can all appreciate – a formalist one. It's rarely noted that DeMille was a master of space and framing, and he always used his command of cinematic form to serve the story. It's natural that any competent director would depict the reformatory as Spartan and enclosed – and DeMille does that with visible ceilings, tight framing, swathes of barren grey and high angles in the yard so as not to show the sky or the outside world. However, DeMille also employs similar devices in the earlier scenes at the college. Why? Because the point of the story is that both the atheist girl and the Christian boy are close-minded and prejudiced, and DeMille's formalism is echoing this. They escape into the outside world at the same time as their convictions are beginning to soften, and DeMille takes full advantage of the outdoor setting with delicate framing, dappled lighting patterns and soft focus. It also gives him the perfect backdrop for his aforementioned argument from beauty.

The acting of the two leads is not at all bad, and for the most part tends more towards naturalism than melodrama (performances in DeMille pictures tended to go one way or the other – contradictions again!) The one moment of painful exaggeration from Lina Basquette is, unsurprisingly, in her early scene at the atheist meeting. The only sour note among the cast is comical character actor Eddie Quillan as "The Goat". In a rare display of deference to an actor DeMille apparently allowed him to improvise many of his scenes, but his style of comedy is at odds with the tone of the picture and spoils some of the deeper moments. This is not to say that Quillan had no talent, or that a picture such as this has no need of comic relief. It's simply that he is effectively a clown, and would fit better in a more light-hearted picture. Marie Prevost's sardonic sidekick actually provides much more effective comic relief.

On a final note, thanks to Filmfour we now have a very fine restored print of the Godless Girl. The score is by the unparalleled Carl Davis, and like all his work is listenable without being intrusive, and has a canny use of signature themes and classical interpolations. This new edition, occasionally shown late at night on the Filmfour channel in the UK, is well worth catching.
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8/10
A good film, but . . .
bankcello29 December 2008
I very much enjoyed this film. Noah Beery was appropriately villainous and the stars were attractive and appealing.

However, as a life-long atheist, I was offended by De Mille's take on the question of atheism vs. belief. It is clear that he considers atheism to be a very evil thing and something that should be shunned, if not forcibly eliminated.

To my eyes, the religious kids in the school were the truly intolerant ones, who came to the atheist meeting with the intention of breaking it up, using force if needed. Force was indeed used, and the ensuing Merle resulted in the unnecessary death of a student.

The reformatory was a hellish place, though it was interesting that De Mille put in a disclaimer to the effect that although the events depicted actually do take place in some reformatories, there are many that actually try to rehabilitate, so we shouldn't judge such places too harshly.

The first is exciting and it seems that the set was actually burned down, with injuries inflicted on the star.

As an atheist, I wasn't too fond of the heroine's conversion.
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7/10
Here endeth the first Lesson
Spondonman28 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
First time of watching this one, but judging by the previous poster's apparently erudite comments, not complete! And yet the version I've just seen is an immaculate and gleaming 2007 Photoplay production restored by the George Eastman House from Cecil B. DeMille's own nitrate print – which means either he or GEH revised the content somewhere down the line or maybe the previous poster watched another film. With any possible salacious bits and sound segment at the end being deleted I guess it probably makes for a more unified and flowing screenplay anyway, written by Jeanie Macpherson, DeMille's long time collaborator.

At a college the Atheist Society clashes with the devout Christian element (or vice versa!) leading to the accidental death of a girl. Three of the ringleaders, 2 boys and a girl are sent to the Reformatory where although already basically good anyway they eventually … reform of course. They face the official cold brutality of the regime but especially that of savage Noah Beery, here apparently intent on recreating his role as Lejaune in Beau Geste from 3 years before. Under such restraints Bob and Judy still manage to fall in love, while Bozo managed to get beaten to a pulp by the Brute for passing Bob an illegal doughnut in solitary. Basquette and Keene made a fine looking young couple, even though he was 33 at the time, finding that Love can help you cope with all of Life's vicissitudes. Favourite bit: Retribution and redemption in the fire scene.

The message that we need God for God is Love is laid on with a trowel, but it's far better than today's main movie message that Evil is Better! Overall, a nice and quaint film with good sets, good photography, a beginning middle and end - a storyline to keep you hooked.
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Interesting, but, confused
Jumbajookiba9 June 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Can I just say that the review posted by the gentleman in 2003 is not at all accurate. For starters, there is no shower scene as described, secondly, Mame does not recoil at the sight of a bible, in fact, she does quite the opposite and encourages Judy to read it. he either saw a different cut or a different movie altogether. Those points aside, this is an interesting movie, but, not spectacular. it was confused in how it wanted to portray Judy and Bob as they went through reform school and to be honest I found the comic relief of Bozo inappropriate and annoying. Mame was a very sympathetic character and well portrayed by Marie Provost and both leads Lina Basquette and James Duryea were very good too. Noah Beery was chilling as the sadistic Warden particularly when he turns the hose on Bob in a brutal scene. The quality of the print and the soundtrack by the wonderful Sir Carl Davis made this worth watching and thank you Filmfour for broadcasting it. Lets get many more silents on television in the UK please.
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7/10
more sophisticated than the usual DeMille
klg1921 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This is a surprisingly complex film with stunning cinematography and terrific performances.

The opening titles tell us "It is not generally known that there are Atheist Societies using the schools of the country as their battle-ground--attacking, through the Youth of the Nation, the beliefs that are sacred to most of the people," adding "And no fanatics are so bitter as youthful fanatics." This leads the viewer to believe that the film is likely to be polemical and mainstream, but it takes a few switches along the way.

Our leads are introduced, "Judy, daughter of Atheism...Bob, son of Gospel...Intolerance vs. Intolerance," and immediately we see that conventions are going to be overturned, and extremism of every kind rejected. Bob (the extremely handsome Tom Keene. ne George Duryea) and Judy (the sultry, zaftig Lina Basquette,who was apparently Hitler's favorite American actress) are drawn to each other, despite their contempt for the others' views. They clash as Tom's true believers try to shut down a meeting of Judy's Godless Society ("Kill the Bible"). In the mêlée, a young girl falls through a top-storey banister to her death. Most of the kids flee, but Bob and Judy run to her side, and with Bob's friend, the bozo "Bozo," are taken in by the authorities and sent to reformatories.

Here, Judy is befriended by the pious Mame (marvellously portrayed by Marie Prevost), and both Bob and Judy are put through various trials by the guards and matrons, notably the guard captain played by Noah Beery. Mame's goodness drives the first cracks through Judy's atheist certainty, and this is aided in no small part by the heavy-handed device of crosses burned onto Judy's palms by an encounter with an electrified chain-link fence.

There is some unintentional meta black comedy in a scene where Judy and Mame are working in the reformatory butchery: Mame drapes some freshly-made sausages around her like strings of pearls and shows off for Judy. "I'm just puttin' on a little dog!" says Mame, played by Marie Prevost who would die of malnutrition in her apartment and end up gnawed by her starving pet dachshund before her body was discovered.

Bob plans a daring escape for himself and Judy and, while at liberty in an orchard, they discover not only that they are in love but that their rigid certainties have undergone some changes. Judy has begun to see a higher power operating behind the world's glory, and Bob's world view has darkened, acknowledging a level of evil that can not simply be sung away with hymns. This, again, is conveyed rather heavy-handedly, as they show their prisoner numbers transform with a single pencil-stroke into the words HELL (Bob's 7734) and LOVE (Judy's 3107).

But their idyll is short-lived; they're captured and returned to prison, where each is locked in solitary. An accidental fire in the girl's section leads to Bob's release to help quench the flames, but Judy is forgotten below. Bob tussles with the Guard Captain and leaves him in the fire while he releases Judy. Beery calls out, "Save me, kids--don't let me burn!" Bob, grown darker, is ready to leave him there to die, but the redeemed Judy cries out, "Don't judge him, Bob--SAVE him!" They do, and Beery recommends their release. Happy ending.

The print I saw on TCM was pristine and sharp--as clean and beautiful a if it had been shot yesterday, which really enhanced the beauty of the riot scene, the orchard idyll, and the suspenseful climactic fire. Carl Davis' new score was stirring, but his use of a leitmotiv clearly lifted from Paul Simon's "An American Tune" was extremely distracting.

The first comment, below, from 2003, describes a sexual dimension to the film which I failed to see (although there's a lovely scene in the orchard where Bob expresses a desire to live for today (i.e., "let's have sex") and Judy responds with her belief in a tomorrow that should keep today unspoiled (i.e., "no")). But then the commenter also mentions the sound-enhanced final scenes which, according to TCM, do exist, but in re-shot scenes which are not part of this restored print.

It's wonderful that TCM and the George Eastman House brought this film back to life. It can be seen on DVD in the collection "Treasures III: Social Issues in American Film" but I don't know if it has this version from DeMille's own nitrate print. It's worth seeing, if only because the conflict between non-believers and believers still rages today, and both sides could use a little of the tolerance this film preaches.
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9/10
Dramatic silent film with score not stolen from Paul Simon
rberlind31 December 2008
I don't usually like silent movies, finding them boring. But this one is actually very good and even quite dramatic. I wanted to comment on something said by another viewer about the score by Carl Davis. They said that the composer had stolen Paul Simon's "An American Tune". Actually, Paul Simon borrowed the theme from Bach's Chorale "Erkenne mich, mein Hueter" from the St. Matthew Passion. This is the actual theme that Mr. Davis used in his score, and he did give credit, listing this and other sources of his themes in the credits at the end of the film.

Also, while my wife and I watched the movie on TCM, we did not see any scenes with spoken dialog as another reviewer mentioned, even though TCM showed a version based on Cecil De Mille's personal nitrate print from George Eastman House. Maybe this version tried to recreate the film as originally envisioned as a full silent film with music.
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7/10
Sans epic milieu Cecil B still showman.
st-shot20 August 2011
B DeMille can still find enough sensational material in modern day America as an excuse to bring on chaos and destruction in The Godless Girl. It's atheists versus Christians in a struggle for the soul of roaring twenties youth not debated through civil discourse but violence and calamity with CB measuring it out in clockwork segments.

High schooler Judy Craig is out "to kill the bible" by organizing and giving lectures on atheism. When the principal gets wind of a meeting he completely abandons his responsibility and allows the student body president and his righteous classmates to deal with the problem. Displaying high school spirit like jack booted Fascists they bust up the meeting which results in a death and packs both instigators off to prison for manslaughter. Conveiently both the men's and women's reformatories are neighbors and the two end up bonding against a sadistic warden.

Basically a silent The Godless Girl offers an audacious and defiant female well ahead of her time in Judy Craig with Lena Basquette conveying a confident and independent exterior most of the film. Bob Keene has the look of an Arrow man but is dull in comparison to Lena's Judy. Marie Prevost and Eddie Quillan provide some comic bits while Noah Beery is his usual sadistic self as the corrections officer.

For his part DeMille provides an abundance of hair raising scenes including an hallucinogenic fall over a banister with the crowd looking on. C.B. is clearly on the Creator's side but he does give us a feisty heroine in the non-believer Judy while unintentionally exposing the rabid intolerance of the God squad. DeMille also seems to be at a loss on what to do between the torrid scenes but by then the provocative poster or coming attraction has already secured your money.
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10/10
Visionary DeMille
overseer-323 June 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The Godless Girl (1929), Cecil B. DeMille's last silent film, has been lovingly restored by George Eastman House from a print obtained from DeMille's estate, and featuring a powerful and moving soundtrack created by Carl Davis; original themes in addition to some classical religious pieces. I am sure that once more silent film fans get a chance to see this beautiful movie it will increase in reputation, and it certainly deserves more than its current 6.0 average rating out of 10.

Of all of DeMille's silents this one is perhaps the most visionary. The title cards are especially beautiful and impressive and topical for our own time. One doesn't have to go back to Bible times to create a spiritual film which can touch audiences, and to me personally therein lies the real appeal of this motion picture. It goes in directions you don't expect it to and it surprises you at every turn. The film is really a plea for tolerance between believers in God and non-believers. Both groups can display intolerance toward one another and then nothing is gained, because nothing is understood when it is cloaked in anger. Whatever someone's faith is, or lack of it, we are all still part of the human family and should treat each other with respect.

Regarding the cast, I thought all the actors were very good and brought pathos and humor to their roles. I liked seeing Lina Basquette in a silent, there isn't much available for her, and I really enjoyed seeing Marie Prevost in sharp focus, acting her heart out as Lina's character's friend (other silents available for Marie tend to be public domain mangled prints). She gives the best performance of her career in this one! Tom Keene looked slightly old to be playing a teenager but he was a good actor and brought many layers to his performance. Eddie Quillan was comic relief and did a great job. Noah Beery played the villain, something he was noted for, and did another outstanding job. Mary Jane Irving was touching as the young girl who dies, which precipitates the others being arrested for involuntary manslaughter and sent to a reformatory.

From video clips I had seen of this film in a DeMille documentary I didn't think I would like it, but this movie surprised me. It has some beautiful moments and glistening cinematography and thoughtful title cards, many with decorative backgrounds. I suspect DeMille's long time assistant Jeanie Macpherson had a lot to do with the latter. I'm not sure but I can imagine that this film was a hard one for 1929 audiences to take, but for us in 2007 it really hits home.
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6/10
Early DeMille morality tale...not bad at all with climactic fire sequence...
Doylenf14 December 2008
During the awkward transitional stage from silents to talkies, Cecil B. DeMille made this 1929 story about THE GODLESS GIRL. It's given a very heavy-handed treatment and the Christian values vs. Atheism may seem a bit jarring to modern audiences.

LINA BASQUETTE has the title role, a movie originally shot as a silent film but with some sound added before the film was released. It's an intimate drama, a crime story involving high school students, not the usual epic kind of film DeMille is famous for except for a climactic fire sequence.

A riot breaks out at high school when someone circulates pamphlets on Atheism and meets a lot of resistance from a religious group. Three of the students end up in a reformatory when one of the girls among the students dies when a stair railing collapses.

Treatment there seems to be worse than the average prison. Things go from bad to worse when brutal guard NOAH BEERY gets his hands on two of the male students disobeying rules. DeMille seems to relish showing the brutal treatment. The hero of the tale, TOM KEENE, devises an escape plan so he and Lina can escape the torments of the so-called reform school.

Suspense builds for the escape plan and there's a quieter interlude where the boy and girl with different beliefs fall in love. But then the action picks up again after the two are found by the authorities and returned to their prison. While she's in solitary, an accidental fire sets the stage for the very suspenseful conclusion wherein the hero has to come to her rescue.

Summing up: One of the better silent films, it holds the interest throughout and builds to a realistic fire sequence that director DeMille milks for all it's worth.
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9/10
Time to re-evaluate deMille
brimon2815 March 2008
Having viewed a new sound-free print accompanied by a top silent-film pianist, I have developed a new respect for Cecil B deMille. I used to regard him as unwatchable. Being a little deaf, I was able to lip-read in the close-ups, so I was highly amused by the witty colloquialisms in the captions. I wonder how the people who later applied a sound track handled that! Judging by the other posts, I think this print had more in it than was shown in other countries. Comments in the foyer afterward: "Television still has a lot to learn" and from a film producer: "It's time to re-evaluate Cecil B". This retired cinematographer saw a very fine piece of direction.
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7/10
Lina Basquette, R.I.P. Warning: Spoilers
"The Godless Girl" was one of Cecil B. DeMille's cynical attempts to combine sexual sensationalism with puritanical moralising ... thus catering for movie audiences' voyeurism while stroking their prejudices and allowing them to feel moral and pious. Many of DeMille's films offered this combination of sexual exploitation and fetishism in a moralistic framework ... which explains why DeMille's movies almost invariably were huge hits at the box office.

Lina Basquette (dark-haired and very beautiful) portrays Judy Craig, the leader of the Atheist Society, a radical students' group. She is opposed by George Hathaway (Tom Keene, too old for his role), the handsome leader of a club for church-going Christian students. The two factions clash on campus, and a girl is accidentally killed. (There are two impressive elevator shots here, similar to a shot in Rene Clair's film 'Sous les Toits de Paris'.) The bitter rivals Judy and George, plus hapless scapegoat Samuel 'Bozo' Johnson (comic relief Eddie Quillan, who seems to be in an entirely different movie), are charged with manslaughter. Because they're minors, they're sentenced to the reformatory rather than prison.

SLIGHT SPOILERS COMING. DeMille takes great delight in showing us Judy's degradation. We see long loving close-ups as Lina Basquette's beautiful long hair is clipped short for her entry into the Borstal. It's clear that DeMille is aroused by Judy's degradation, and that he expects us to feel the same way.

Eventually, Judy and George (former enemies) manage to break out of the reformatory together and escape to a pastoral wilderness where they can start over as Eve and Adam in a new Eden. This was another recurring motif in DeMille's films ... as in 'Four Frightened People', in which Claudette Colbert and Herbert Marshall portray two repressed people who lose their inhibitions (and their clothing) in a tropical paradise. Basquette's eyeliner remains intact throughout her adventures.

"The Godless Girl" was the peak of Basquette's career. Allegedly, her performance in this film was so convincing that movie audiences supposedly assumed that Basquette herself must be as immoral as the atheist she portrays here ... and so she was never again cast in a starring role. I suspect that Basquette was actually a casualty of talking pictures. "The Godless Girl" was filmed as a silent movie with brief sound-film sequences in the final reel. The audible sequences reveal that Basquette was unsuited for a career in talking pictures. Her voice isn't as bad as Marceline Day's (another leading lady of the late silent era whose peculiar diction scuttled her talking-picture career), but Basquette's voice isn't very good and it records badly. Ironically, one of Basquette's husbands was Sam Warner of Warner Brothers: the one man in Hollywood who, more than anyone else, pushed for the talking-film revolution. (Sam's brother Jack L Warner opposed the idea, but was quick to take credit after Sam's death.)

After Basquette's last divorce, she retired to a remote farm in Pennsylvania where she bred Great Danes, also working as an unpaid judge at dog shows. In 1943, an AWOL serviceman trespassed on Basquette's farm and raped her. The assault made national headlines; prior to Connie Francis, Lina Basquette was probably the most famous show-biz personality to be publicly identified as a rape victim. Her assailant was convicted, and he did heavy prison time. Sadly, in the 1940s and '50s, Basquette was better known for being raped than for her careers as an actress and dog breeder.

"The Godless Girl" is heavy-handed, but still a very powerful film which I strongly recommend. It's an excellent example of the awkward period of Hollywood's transition from silent films to talkies. I'll rate this movie 7 points out of 10.
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10/10
A Perfect Film
Maleejandra16 July 2007
Cecil B. DeMille was notorious for spectacle films, and his religious ones were always successful. This movie combines both of these, but it also employs another of DeMille's talents, social commentary.

Judy (Lina Basquette) is an atheist, and passes out flyers about her Godless club to recruit new members. Bob (Tom Keene) is a Christian who hates what Judy is doing to the school. As class president, he brings a group of believers to an atheist rally to crash the party. It becomes a violent fight between the two sides which ends in the death of a girl. The leaders of the groups, Judy and Bob, are held responsible, and are sent to reform school.

This isn't the reform school from a children's film. The guards (Noah Beery) are as harsh as jail guards and they have no tolerance for mistakes. Judy finds a friend in Mame (Marie Prevost), a believer who takes on a leadership position with Judy. Her religion detracts in no way from her spunky personality, though, and she proves to be a bright spot in such a terrible place. The two girls can't seem to avoid trouble, and neither can Bob, so the three form sort of a team. But the gongs keep ringing, signaling orders to be carried out. It is inevitable that something major happens.

Of course it does, and there are revelations. The religious aspects of the film are subtle but nonetheless powerful. Any faith can watch and enjoy this movie. It is thanks to the actors for making each lesson so strong and truthful. Basquette and Keene are great together. Prevost is outstanding in her role. She commands attention because she is equally fun and moral, adding a depth not often found in sidekick roles.

The film it an absolutely amazing example of the abilities of silent film makers. The editing is fantastic, and so many innovative camera angles are used, it's amazing that talkies took so long to re-adopt them. The finished product is polished and perfect; every second is captivating.

Many thanks go to Kevin Brownlow and Photoplay Productions for the restoration of this film. Carl Davis provides an enchanting score that compliments the action wonderfully. This is a top-notch film that was worked on by top-notch film lovers.
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6/10
Crap....but very exciting crap!
planktonrules21 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
What an interesting contrast. In this 1929 film, Atheists are trying to infiltrate a school and the principal is determined to "stamp out this blasphemy". Today, in many schools, the opposite is true--schools telling students they cannot bring religious items to school and religious clubs are forbidden. Personally, I'd sue love to see a world where BOTH diametrically opposed views were allowed and even encouraged.

Soon after the film begins, you see a secret meeting of an atheist club. They even have a monkey as a mascot (a nod to Darwinism). The good Christian kids respond by raiding the meeting and beating the snot out of them. Whether the film intends for this to be a GOOD thing or if it goes on to encourage ALL religious toleration is left to be seen. In the meantime, the fight becomes absolutely insane--violent and uncontrolled--worse than a prison riot!! Eventually, a student is killed in the mêlée!! As this atheist dies, she panics--after all, is this is end?! Is there something after death?

Three rather randomly chosen teens are sent to reform school for this death--one Atheist (the girl), one Christian and one sitting on the fence (Eddie Quillan). Quillan was toying with joining the Atheists but chickened out at the last minute. Here, he seems to be in the film for comic relief--an odd type of character for this film. Much of the rest of the film is the standard prison film--showing both the women's and the men's institutions.

In an odd twist, however, the two prisons are side by side (divided by an electric fence) and the godless girl and Christian boy start chatting--and becoming very chummy. In a scene you could only get away with in a silent film AND if you are DeMille, as the two talk through the fence, they are electrocuted--and the fence burns cross-like imprints on the Atheist's hands and it's an apparent sign from God!! It was amazingly melodramatic and dumb. I almost expected to see stigmata next!

The boys' prison ends up being very, very brutal thanks to some savage guards. The nice boys are savagely beaten and it's so bad that Quillan is either beaten to death or close to it (the film doesn't let us know) and the other guy escapes...with the Atheist girl!! Talk about a couple of "strange bedfellows"! You'll just have to tune in to see how it all ends--and it does end on a very exciting note.

As a film about Atheists, THE GODLESS GIRL is a mixed up mess. It's message is so muddled you really don't know what DeMille intended. Was it a film about how Atheists are wrong? Is it a film about religious toleration? With a pointless nude scene (don't worry--you don't see much--unlike in some other DeMille films), a romance between the Atheist and Christian that seems based solely on hormones, and lots of violence, it's hard to tell what religious message is being promoted. All this is pretty typical of DeMille's films of the era, as they are a strange blend of Christianity and blatant sex!! Don't believe me? Then try watching SIGN OF THE CROSS and CLEOPATRA (1934)--they are chock full of stuff that should have kept Christians away from the theaters in droves.

As a film about reform schools and a need for change, the film is much more successful and interesting. While the film seemed to go way overboard on the savagery of the male prison in particular, it did serve to bring these sort of prisons to the light of the public--even though the film inserted a message during the break in the middle that tended to lessen the film's impact.

Overall, it's a really stupid film--pure crap. However, it's exciting and scandalous crap that is sure to entertain. Just don't confuse ANYTHING DeMille ever did as an endorsement of Christianity--he probably did more to hurt Christianity than Pontius Pilate and Karl Marx combined!! Why he is revered by some religious people (especially after this film) is beyond me.

This is one of several shorts and full-length films included on the DVD set entitled "American Film Archives: Volume 3"--a set of films dedicated to social causes. While the set would probably not be of much interest to the casual viewer, it is a great historical archive of American life and concerns that otherwise would have been forgotten.
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5/10
Prison Fire In The End Makes The Film Worth It
bkoganbing7 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
The last silent film directed by Cecil B. DeMille is also the last done under the auspices of his independent production company which he had founded a few years earlier after leaving Paramount. By far and away the most successful film his studio did was King Of Kings. DeMille relates in his autobiography that the coming of sound doomed his silent film to box office losses and the studio as well. Thus ended DeMille's brief attempt at being another Sam Goldwyn.

If you're a member of the 700 Club, The Godless Girl is the film for you. It concerns young high school coquette Lina Basquette and her attempt to start an atheist society in her school. The story one must presume is set in a red state because it's going against the community mores and laws. You heard me, laws. The school principal threatens to send the atheists to prison, but Tom Keene as head of the Christian group says they'll handle it in their own way.

Handle it they do when they break up the meeting like storm troopers, but unfortunately Mary Jane Irving one of the atheist kids is killed. The one who actually pushed her down a flight of stairs, Eddie Quillan is arrested and sent to prison and so are Basquette and Keene.

But the brutal conditions in the juvenile reformatory make allies of Christian and non-believer. Keene and Basquette do see each other through an electrically wired fence. And Cupid takes his course even in a prison.

DeMille who grew up in the 19th century's last years acts as a spokesperson for the other generation, appalled at the hedonistic attitudes of the Flapper era. He also knew that hedonism spelled s-e-x is good box office. Basquette is properly seductive looking though frankly at the atheist meeting all the audience sees is talk. But it's the lack of morals implied that DeMille gets over.

One other curious thing that got me is that at no time do you see any of the families of Basquette, Keene, or any of the other juvenile offenders.

DeMille also related in his autobiography that the film was enormously popular in the Soviet Union. But the reason was that scenes of religious redemption were cut out and the film was exhibited as an example of capitalist decadence. Personally that might have made me want to defect.

The master of spectacle gave his audience a real doozy of a prison fire at the end. It's really exciting stuff, possibly the best thing about The Godless Girl.

Unless you are a fundamentalist Christian and this is how you would like to see public schools run today, The Godless Girl is one terribly outdated film. Questions like academic freedom and liberty of conscience are not even raised here. But the special effects are in keeping with Cecil B. DeMille's reputation and The Godless Girl stands as an example of some old fashioned ideas that could never be sold to today's movie audience.
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rebuttal re: Lina Basquette
lindel_gum1 May 2004
As someone who knew Lina personally, I can safely say that she would NEVER have categorized her life as "tragic". Like many people, she had her share of heartaches and disappointments, but her attitude was positive and she loved her life and her friends. She successfully transitioned into a post-Hollywood career breeding and judging championship Great Danes, a true passion of hers. Her sense of humor, her grace and her passion for life were inspiring to those of us fortunate enough to have known her. It was her passion that makes "The Godless Girl" memorable. It was her remarkable strength and dedication to those whom she loved that makes HER memorable.
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7/10
Campiness is Next to Godliness
Cineanalyst22 October 2019
"The Godless Girl" is a riot; indeed, it features two full-blown riots. If this late silent film were intended earnestly--and given that Cecil B. DeMille, director twice over of "The Ten Commandments" (1923 and 1956) and other straightforward religious spectacles, along with usual writer Jeanie Macpherson, made this, I assume it was--all the better, for being amused at its outrageous ostentation. It's basically a campy exploitation film, including a critique of atheism that's as sophisticated as the treatment of marijuana in "Reefer Madness" (1936), followed by scenes in an adjoining boys-and-girls prison (a so-called "reform school," for our 20-to-30-something-aged actors playing teenagers here), but produced with all the polish and panache characteristic of DeMille's usually-simplistic fare. Often, such a patently-ridiculous scenario would only work as a so-good-it's-bad film, but this one is well made throughout. It's a joy whether one is laughing at its holier-than-thou piety, shocked by the sensational brutality, excited by a chase and last-minute rescue, or if to merely appreciate the beauty films attained at the end of the silent era--before the church of talkies set the art back to the dark ages, if only for a few years.

I wonder how those not as daft as DeMille could take this film seriously otherwise. The Atheist Society plays like an exaggerated mirror-image of a proselytizing fundamentalist cult, with Judy, the godless girl, raving and gesticulating like the Maria robot inciting the workers to revolt in "Metropolis" (1927), while her fellow pupils pledge allegiance by placing their hand on the head of their evolutionary "cousin," a monkey (remember, the Scopes Trial was recent history when this was made). Judy's propaganda pamphlets and posters are absurdly heavy-headed satirical cartoons. Meanwhile, the godly boy, nicknamed "Angel" (played by an actor who would further pioneer camp in Ed Wood films) convinces the schoolmaster, who informs the student body that distributing atheistic pamphlets is punishable by imprisonment, to allow him to take the law into his own hands. He's granted the right on the condition that Angel do so without violence. Naturally, the film's first riot ensues in the subsequent sequence. The offensive portrayal of atheism is hardly alleviated by Angel's gang of holy warriors being no better, although it does make for some outrageous amusement.

After that, things quickly turn to overripe melodrama with an interfaith romance between Judy and Angel, as well as a bit of a love triangle with the inclusion of the other girl. In one scene, Judy laughably baths and frolics about in nature--her a grown woman, eye-rollingly, pretending a schoolgirl nymph. And, I don't even know what (or don't want to try) to make of two flirtatious scenes involving sausages. While Archie Angel must decide between Betty and Veronica, the reform-school inmates suffer abuse from a sadistic guard (played by a fuming Noah Beery, seemingly always on the verge or in the process of a violent outburst). As expected, Judy also begins to convert to Christianity, including after her embrace of an electric fence leaves cross-shaped stigmata on her hands. Subtle, DeMille was not. Whereas the film takes time out in the middle of all of this action for a title card explaining that not all reform schools are so bad, it makes no apologies for its religious bigotry. Appropriately enough, the whole thing climaxes in a hellish fire. I mean, William S. Hart already beat them to the punch here in "Hell's Hinges" (1916), for obvious symbolism, but it still makes for an exciting, if blunt, finale.

DeMille had a varied filmmaking career, which isn't much of a surprise given its longevity--spanning from the static Western "The Squaw Man" (1914) to such a Technicolor and VistaVision extravaganza as his 1956 "The Ten Commandments." He had some arty pictures early, including the chiaroscuro lighting in "The Cheat" (1915), then moved to alternating between sex comedies and biblical pictures, but some of his late silents and early talkies are enjoyably odd. These films often include a sensational climax, whether it be some form of construction falling apart as here or in, say, "Dynamite" (1929), or courtroom theatrics, as in "The Cheat" and his unofficially-directed "Chicago" (1927). "The Godless Girl" sits at the end of one and the beginning of another era; DeMille's last silent film, it was also released in a goat-gland version with added talkie scenes, but this adulteration doesn't seem to be in circulation, if it even exists anymore. Oh well, actors saying some of the already-over-the-top lines in the intertitles here would likely be even too much for my appreciation of bad taste.
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8/10
DeMille Demonstrates His Directorial Dexterity
atlasmb2 May 2016
"The Godless Girl" was director Cecil B. DeMille's last silent film. At the time, he was Hollywood's most successful director, but his last film--"The King of Kings"-- had angered some Christian viewers and he wanted a film to placate them. His idea for "The Godless Girl" came from a real news story about Hollywood High School, which was greatly embellished.

The film starts with a boy and girl who are attracted to each other. But the girl, Judy (Lina Basquette), is the head of "The Godless Society" (GS), an organization of students who wish to "kill the Bible". And the boy, Bob (Tom Keene), is student body president, devout Christian, and a model citizen. When the school's principal discovers that the nefarious GS is working to undermine society's laws, he sets out to destroy it. But Bob intervenes and says he will take care of it.

Events get out of hand and three students--Judy, Bob and class clown Samuel "Bozo" Johnson (Eddie Quillen)--are deemed responsible for a death and sent to a reformatory. This institution is like the worst adult prison. The especially sadistic head guard even twists his mustache like all respectable villains. Though there is a final act, the bulk of the film is dedicated to showing what a horrible place such institutions can be.

The film is not heavy-handed in promoting its Christian message, but it has its moments when Judy's atheistic philosophy is tested. Two such moments involve the "no atheists in foxholes" canard. The other is a simple appeal to the intelligent design view of the universe.

Regardless of DeMille's philosophical intentions, his skills as a director are remarkable. Inventive camera movements, wonderful nighttime scenes, convincing uses of fire as a dangerous element, and crowd choreography all demonstrate his talents.

The acting is true to the tradition of overacting in silent films, especially in the case of Miss Basquette. Tom Keene plays the comic part of Bob with a facility that still seems appropriate to a serious drama with deeper underpinnings.

Although the film hits the viewer over the head with its depiction of an atheistic character, to the point of putting a monkey in the scene of the GS meeting, the story still demonstrates some subtlety--sometimes feeling off track--and even some objectivity in portraying the two sides of the theistic question. Still, DeMille has stacked the deck enough to make audiences of 1929 feel that theism is the easy victor in the "war" for their souls. Religious imagery and emotional appeals to faith abound.

The restored copy (without sound) is well worth seeing.
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8/10
was not expecting as much as I got from this movie
marymorrissey17 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
yes it could be painfully slow at times but this movie really comes across with the goods. in an age in which everything on screen looks completely fake (I speak of the present) the intense final sequences of this film produce a kind of tension unmatched in anything you'll find at the multiplex. also the handling of religious themes - at times so hokey it could only be matched by the stories nuns used to tell in catholic school when I was growing up, efforts of the babes in black and white to scare us straight - is one of the surprising strengths of this film. In his intro on TMC Robert Osborne spoke of the sound scenes with speaking parts that conclude the picture, but ... I didn't hear any dialogue, so I don't know what was up with that! as another reviewer has commented, an early elevator shot is itself worth the price of admission, to die for, beautiful bordering on surreal. for a precious moment you're not looking at a Hollywood film at all. one could be forgiven for fast forwarding through some sequences, and the unhappy convention of releasing silents with inappropriately modern sounding film scores is a drawback, but if it comes on do give it its head and see it through. all in all it's quite the satisfying movie watching experience.
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8/10
A Religious Movie Atheists Can Enjoy
disinterested_spectator7 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Judy and Bob are high school students. Judy is a militant atheist, who holds atheist rallies, accompanied by a monkey as a prop, whom she refers to as our cousin. Bob is a Christian fundamentalist who leads a bunch of like-minded Christians on a raid of one of those meetings. A mêlée breaks out, during which a girl dies accidentally. Bob and Judy are sent to a reform school. After enduring much brutality, they escape and fall in love. While bathing in a river, Judy admires the beauty of nature, made no less beautiful by a naked Judy, and she thinks how she might almost believe in a God who created it. Bob, on the other hand, recalling all horrors of the reform school, says there is no way he can believe in a God who would allow such things to happen.

So far there is balance between the two. But notwithstanding the fact that this is a pre-Code movie, I knew that it would be required that Judy pray to God before the movie was over. I thought of "San Francisco" (1936) and "The Spiral Road" (1962), where the atheists in those two movies eventually break and humble themselves before God, and so I braced myself for the inevitable.

They are captured and returned to the reform school. Bob is handcuffed to the bench in his cell, but Judy is handcuffed to a pipe above her head, forcing her to stand with her arm extended upward. Within the movie, the difference between the way Bob and Judy are handcuffed seems to be just a matter of chance. But from outside the movie, it just did not make sense, since handcuffed like that she would not be able to use the bucket, but would have to foul her pants when she needed to defecate. I suspected there was a reason this was put in the movie, but I could not figure out what. Soon all was revealed. A fire breaks out in the reform school, and Judy is forgotten about as the flames close in around her. In desperation, she prays. It is a conditional kind of prayer, not exactly expressing full belief, but more importantly, because of the way she is handcuffed, she cannot kneel. She thus retains her dignity, literally standing tall, and thus figuratively as well.

After Judy is saved by Bob, they rescue the brutal guard, whose dying wish is that they be pardoned, and so they are. As they ride away from the prison, Bob curses the foul place, but Judy says that it was where they learned to believe, and let believe. It is not clear exactly what each believes at this point, but they will clearly tolerate each other's views, whatever they may be. More importantly, because we were not treated to a vulgar display of humiliation and self-abasement on the part of Judy, this is a movie an atheist can enjoy, regardless of what Judy may or may not believe in the end.
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9/10
Watch For Marie
davidjanuzbrown8 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This was an excellent movie ( especially the fire scene). Cecil B. Demille always seems to make great movies. That said more than DeMille, I think dogs when I think of this movie. The tragic Marie Provost who had the reputation of being eaten by her dog and Lena Basquette who became a champion trainer of Great Danes. Marie who played Mame the best friend of Judy The Godless Girl ( Basquette) really steals the movie. Spoilers ahead. At the end of the movie when the fire scene comes and Judy is chained and forgotten about, it is Mame that tells Bob Hathaway ( the Christian boy who loves Judy) about it and then with another student goes after both of them with a fire hose. I have seen Marie in other movies: The Racket, Sporting Blood, and Three Wise Girls and this is her best movie.
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5/10
Real DeMille nonsense
marcslope21 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
C.B.'s standard formula -- serve up plenty of sex and violence, then moralize pompously about it -- is employed effectively in his last silent, an overlong melodrama about the scourge of atheism. He sets up his parameters quickly and efficiently: Christians good, atheists bad. But he rather loses track through arbitrariness of plotting. The whole idea of sending these three particular kids to reform school when they're not particularly responsible for the death of the young girl is hackneyed, and he can't quite make any of them sympathetic. Other I-don't-get-its include how easy it is to escape from said reform school, the electric fence that both kids are evidently too stupid to simply remove their hands from (it burns a cross into their palms -- that's DeMille for you), and why mustache-twirling-nasty Noah Beery should suddenly become a sweetie at the fadeout (and how such a happy ending could possibly spring from such tormented precedings). The atheism-vs.-Christianity theme largely gets lost, which may be a blessing, as we know how ham-fisted this director could be about such things. But it's fun in its unsubtle way, with photogenic leads, poetic photography, and amusingly 1920s-colloquial titles. Acting is pretty much beside the point in such DeMilles, where actors are chosen more for their looks than any histrionic ability. But Marie Prevost is notably good as a sympathetic reform-school floozy, and the leads, Lina Basquette and Tom Keene, were at least nice to look at.
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Very Unique Film
Michael_Elliott8 February 2009
Godless Girl, The (1929)

*** (out of 4)

This here turned out to be DeMille final silent as well as his first sound film. Apparently the movie was shot completely silent but after filming and sound films had become popular, they went back and added a dialogue sequence but the version I watched, from Photoplay, doesn't have that sequence in it. The film is about two teens: Judy (Lina Basquette) a hard boiled Atheist and Bob (Tom Keene) a boy who believes in nothing but the Bible. Judy has a crush on him but he doesn't know it, which leads him and a gang of Christian to break into her meeting. A riot breaks out and an Atheist girl is killed so Judy, Bob and another kid end up at a reform school where they are abused by the evil guard (Noah Beery). Soon both Judy and Bob are rethinking what they believed when they entered the reformatory. This is a rather strange and bizarre film that's main goal is to preach intolerance but along the way we get all sorts of strange stuff from campy anti-God speeches to brutal violence against kids and then transforming into a tender love story. The movie starts to wear out its welcome in the final act but this remains a strange little film that is so well-told that even though who don't like silents would probably enjoy it. The first part of the film, involving the Christian and Atheist gangs, is rather campy because of how much the two sides are going after one another. Even though it comes off campy it leads to one of the most dramatic and rather beautiful scenes I've seen from any silent and that's where the girl, an Atheist, is afraid to die because she doesn't know what's next. She mentions she's afraid to be alone and a policeman tells her something, that I won't ruin, which comes off so tender that you somewhat feel bad for laughing at some stuff that happened before it. When the prison drama sets in we get some pretty strong violence, which is pure DeMille pulp. Beery is downright evil in his role and is a lot of fun to watch. Basquette, who apparently received a letter from an unknown Hitler after making this film, is very good in her role and really carries this thing from start to finish. Keene, probably best known today for his role in Plan 9 From Outer Space is very good as well. While this film isn't a complete success it remains a very entertaining one that manages to get its point across mainly because it beats the viewer over the head with a Bible. I don't like that much preaching in movies but whoever said DeMille would hold back when wanting to get a message across?
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10/10
From the moment that "Bob" leads his Legion of . . .
cricket3023 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . Righteous Warriors against the Ancient Foe to the stirring strains of "Onward Christian Soldiers," viewers of THE GODLESS GIRL will assume that Salvation lies just around the next corner. Granted, there is a bump or two along THE GODLESS GIRL's Road to Paradise. When her Best Friend "Mary Jane" is pushed through the railing of a high stairwell GODLESS GIRL Julie initially fails to see any "silver lining" within the dark pall cast by this fatal fall. But MJ demonstrates that if one's not an Unbeliever on a jet slicing through the WTC, people usually have time to sigh "I don't want to die alone" if they wish to see the Light. Mary Jane experiences at least one moment of Heavenly Bliss, which the Good Book assures us is worth 10,000 years in San Quentin. Speaking of prisons, there's surely no better place in America to find religion than in the pen, GODLESS GIRL documents. As was the case with the Real Life Watergate henchmen, jail is nearly sure to turn inmates down saintly pathways toward careers in Big Money Evangelism. My church showed THE GODLESS GIRL in its basement potluck room. What a perfect setting!
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5/10
Hooray for Holy-wood!
wes-connors11 June 2011
"It is not generally known that there are Atheist Societies using the schools of the country as their battle-ground - attacking, through the Youth of the Nation, the beliefs that are sacred to most of the people," warns our introduction, "And no fanatics are so bitter as youthful fanatics." Then, a typical American school is rocked by scandal. The trouble begins when chubby atheist Lina Basquette (as Judith "Judy" Craig) has her secret Godless Society meet after distributing pamphlets in school. She and handsome classmate Tom Keene aka George Duryea (as Robert "Bob" Hathaway) are mutually aroused, but he is a die-hard Christian...

At Ms. Basquette's "Kill the Bible" meeting, boyish Eddie Quillan (as Samuel "Bozo" Johnson) almost joins the Godless, but balks when told he'll have to give up Christmas. Later, Mr. Keene arrives with some angry Christians. They fight with the Atheists, to a tragic conclusion. These three principal players are sent to a conveniently adjacent boy/girl reform school. Basquette meets Bible-thumbing Marie Prevost (as Mame), and the two women become chums. Brutish warden Noah Beery treats everyone badly...

This, Cecil B. DeMille's last silent film, had a couple of unimaginative "talking" scenes added in 1929, but it didn't help "The Godless Girl" create much of a flock at the box office. The film promises to be about the timely "threat" Atheists pose to Christians, but is really about bad Youth Reformatory conditions. The leads seem miscast as potential teen-aged (?) sweethearts, while Mr. Quillan and Mr. Prevost perform their roles adeptly. The renowned Mr. DeMille has some exciting moments and images to share.

The version presently seen is the 2007 restoration of DeMille's 1928 original by the George Eastman House for "Photoplay Productions". The 1929 version's talking scenes are omitted. The accomplished Carl Davis contributed a new soundtrack. However well the musicians perform, it is not how the film originally sounded, making it a different viewing experience. Unfortunately, original synchronized sound was not utilized or followed; probably, it was not needed until the film was to move from the coasts to general release, by which time Pathé had withdrawn the movie for sound sequences. Both 1928 and 1929 versions survive.

****** The Godless Girl (8/23/28) Cecil B. DeMille ~ Lina Basquette, Tom Keene, Marie Prevost, Eddie Quillan

***** The Godless Girl (3/31/29) ~ synchronized sound effects track

***** The Godless Girl (5/27/07) ~ Carl Davis soundtrack
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The 12th Annual San Francisco Silent Film Festival, David Jeffers for SIFFblog.com
rdjeffers20 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Sunday, July 15, 8:45 p. m., The Castro, San Francisco

The human condition is a story best told in the unforgiving harshness of black and white. The global struggle of good versus evil, in its most tawdry and salacious terms, are found at the heart of an outrageous over-the-top existence, but only in the hands of Cecil B. deMille. Enter the average day at an All-American high school in deMille's final silent feature The Godless Girl, and discover Grace (Mary Jane Irving) covertly stuffing fliers announcing a secret meeting of The Godless Society into hallway lockers. Before long the staff and student body are whipped into an indignant frenzy of shock and disapproval as the principal declares membership in the immoral club and mere ownership of this piece of paper to be grounds for expulsion and criminal prosecution. Lines are drawn without a hint of middle ground. The bad girl Judy Craig (Lina Basquette), daughter of an atheist, sits at her classroom desk next to good boy and god-fearing Christian Bob Hathaway (George Duryea). They exchange philosophical barbs and an obvious mutual attraction. As is usually the case, the kids seem to know everyone's business while the adults are in total darkness. When their teacher gets his hands on a the flier in question the guilty party is ordered to step forward. Bob requests that the students be allowed to handle the matter. His request is granted (only in Hollywood) and an enormous battle ensues when the Christian kids attempt to break up the secret meeting that night. As the battle rages on the five story stairwell of the abandoned building a railing gives way (on the top floor of course), and Grace plummets to her death. As the mob of kids scatter and the police descend, Judy and Bob remain behind, lamenting their efforts for causing the tragedy. Classroom melodrama graduates into the three-ring spectacle of a co-ed teenage prison film when the kids are committed to the State Reformatory, an enormous brick and barb-wire edifice with a sub-human head guard named The Brute (Noah Beery). Replete with hard labor and excessive humiliation, life at the workhouse is shown in infinite detail, with the boys and girls separated by only a high-tension electrified chain-link fence. Bob watches Judy suffer and swears "I'll get you out of here!" The sadistic Brute sees them clasping hands through the fence and turns on the power, leaving atheist Judy with crosses burned into her palms. Bob is thrown in solitary confinement when he defies the Brute, while Judy works in the Women's Meat House, prancing around with a string of sausages as though they were pearls. They escape and find their way to an abandoned farm before the bloodhounds track them down. Returned to solitary confinement, Bob and Judy are chained to their bunks when a fire ignites and spreads inside the girl's wing in the spectacular finale of The Godless Girl. Bob is freed and goes back to save Judy, with only the Brute blocking his way. A master of film-making within the studio system, deMille relied on a host of craftsmen to manufacture this and other spectacles. Much of the credit for The Godless Girl should rightly go to his long-standing scenarist Jeanie Macpherson, whose unmistakable touch is visible throughout the film.
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