Faith (1916 film)

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Faith
James Kirkwood
Written byJames Kirkwood
StarringMary Miles Minter
CinematographyCarl Widen
Distributed byMutual Film
Release date
  • October 30, 1916 (1916-10-30) (United States)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent
English intertitles

Faith (also known as The Virtuous Outcast) is a 1916 American

James Kirkwood and starring Mary Miles Minter. It was the first of Minter's films to also feature her older sister Margaret Shelby.[1] The film survives and is preserved at George Eastman House, Rochester.[2]

Plot

Mary Miles Minter in "Faith" (1916)

As described in Motography magazine:[3]

Helen Thorpe (Thorne) is secretly married to a man her father (Burton) disapproves of. Her husband is killed and when approaching motherhood forces Helen to confess her secret marriage her father is furiously angry. When the baby is born, Thorpe places it in an orphan asylum, telling Helen that it died. Only the housekeeper and Thorpe know the truth.

Some fifteen years later, Thorpe has married again and is treating his step-daughter, seventeen-year-old Laura (Shelby), in the same rigorous way he had trained Helen, and she too is enmeshed in a secret love affair. Helen, a saddened woman, is unable to influence her father. And Faith (Minter), Helen's daughter, is in an orphan asylum.

Only the old housekeeper has kept track of Faith, and she seizes an opportunity to bring the girl into the Thorpe home as a servant. Faith, whose life is kept bright by the belief that "God's in His Heaven. All's right with the world," has always dreamed of miraculously discovering that she has a mother. This belief makes her unusually solicitous for the mothers of others. So when Laura, the daughter of the house, having come to grief through her clandestine love affair, steals money from Thorpe's safe, Faith assumes the guilt in order to save, not Laura, but Laura's mother.

Faith, however, had been kind not only to mothers, but had played "Little Sunshine" to the neighbourhood in general, and had won as a friend Mark Strong (Banks), once a brilliant lawyer, now a derelict. When Strong learns of the affair, he uses his dormant power to free the girl, and of course his investigations disclose the fact of Faith's parentage and of Thorpe's roguery. Faith finds her mother, and all those who deserve happiness are given it.

Cast

Reception

The New York Times noticed that producers of the film were attempting to make leading actress Minter famous with this picture, but gave all credit to Banks, stating he "walked away with this film".[4]

References

  1. ^ "Sifted from the Studios". Motography. 16 (16). Chicago: Electricity Magazine Corp.: [1] October 14, 1916.
  2. ^ "Faith". Lcweb2.loc.gov. 18 October 2017. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  3. ^ "Current Releases Reviewed: Dulcie's Adventure". Motography. 16 (15). Chicago: Electricity Magazine Corp.: [2] October 7, 1916.
  4. ^ "Movie Reviews". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 18 October 2017.

External links