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The Red Mill

The Red Mill (1927)

January. 29,1927
|
6.8
|
NR
| Comedy Romance

A servant girl plays matchmaker for the local burgomaster's daughter while setting her own sights on a visiting Irishman.

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Contentar
1927/01/29

Best movie of this year hands down!

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CommentsXp
1927/01/30

Best movie ever!

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Murphy Howard
1927/01/31

I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.

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Rexanne
1927/02/01

It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny

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Richard Chatten
1927/02/02

The title 'The Red Mill' is familiar to most film scholars as the film Fatty Arbuckle directed under the pseudonym "William Goodrich" after several years blacklisted by Hollywood following a widely reported sex scandal in 1921. But it proves to be a delightful film in its own right, full of vintage sight gags in which Arbuckle's hand is evident, and further confirming Marion Davies' talent for comedy.Set in an amiable Hollywood caricature of Holland, as a skivvy in a tavern called 'The Red Mill' Ms Davies is made to look comically plain in freckles, pigtails and a Dutch bonnet which we never see her without; even when she decides to glam herself up by applying a mudpack to her face - with hilariously surreal results. Handsomely produced, played as farce and supported by an excellent cast of comic supporting actors (including a mouse called Ignatz), it veers off course towards the end with a sequence set in a haunted windmill that really belongs in a different film. But the film was a big hit in its day and deserves to be better known on its own merits and not merely as a footnote to the Arbuckle scandal.

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audiemurph
1927/02/03

This is a mildly astounding film, made by the finest studio (MGM) in a year (1927) by which time silent feature films were incredible works of art; the timing of the actors, cutting, and overall pacing were pretty much perfect; and all of which had to be thrown out and started all over again with the introduction of sound. This film is doubly astounding when we learn that it was directed by Fatty Arbuckle, some years after he (or at least his name) had been banned from movies. Thus we get a 2-part picture: the first third or so focuses almost exclusively on Marion Davies, giving her patient time to explore and demonstrate her comic abilities; the remainder of the picture is given over to plot, with an increasingly frantic and overall quite imaginative screenplay that is quite fun to follow.The influence of Buster Keaton (old comic partner of Arbuckle) is clearly in evidence in the opening scene: we start with a picturesque vision of Dutch citizens enjoying ice skating on a frozen canal; we cut to a shot of Marion Davies from the waist up, also apparently skating; but as we pull back, we see she is actually "skating" on two scrub brushes that are attached to her shoes, careening around a soapy floor. Very Keatonesque! More bizarre is the bewildering variety of incredibly fat males sprinkled throughout the film. This includes children: in a scene with a couple dozen Dutch kids, we are treated to a dizzying array of really roly-poly boys. And the diminutive Ed Snitzer is several times comically contrasted to the Dutch bohemoths around him. I wonder what Fatty was thinking here...Back to Marion Davies. Now I went through a period in my teens when I was infatuated by the Three Stooges. Now, 30 years later, I am astounded to see a silent female version of Curly Howard, fighting for 5 minutes with an uncooperative ironing board, complete with facial grimaces alternating between frustration and joy. Its proto-Curly! And when Davies tries to solve the problem of an uncooperative cow who keeps whacking her in the face with its tail as she tries to milk it, by tieing a brick to its tail, with the predictable result of the cow whacking her on the head with the brick - well this is a specific gag used by Curly and the Stooges in later films. Now I can't prove who copied who, but the connection from early silent comedy (Arbuckle) through late silent comedy (Davies) to sound slapstick (the Stooges) is fascinating.The only inexplicable thing here is that the Dutch characters speak (through title cards) in English to each other, but because they don't speak English well, their sentences are quite fractured; thus, for example, one girl speaks of having "dislocated" her boyfriend, when she lost him. Get it? If they were meant to be talking in Dutch, the "translations" would be in proper English.Overall, a fun and intriguing comedy, and smooth as silk.

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svaihingen
1927/02/04

Great silent movie shown in a beautifully restored version on TCM.Plot summary: Dutch servant girl falls for an Irish Prince during his vacation in Holland - circumstances prevent their coming together.Later, the Irish Price is back in Holland to be married off to the local rich Burgomaster's daughter. The Burgomaster's daughter, however, is in love with a peasant. The servant girl helps the Burgomaster's daughter dress as a peasant to woo the peasant - meanwhile she dresses as the Burgomaster's daughter.The Prince mistakes the servant girl for the Burgomaster's daughter, falls in love - and madcap hilarity ensues.Will the rich guy get his Maid in Old Amsterdam??? Will the rich Burgomaster's daughter get her peasant??? The story plays out in too many mistaken identity plot devices to count - but the story is fun, clever, charming and actually pretty funny. Recommended viewing.

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Neil Doyle
1927/02/05

The good news is that even the title cards have a wit and humor that is carried over beautifully onto film under Fatty Arbuckle's direction for THE RED MILL, based loosely on a Victor Herbert operetta.Quaint is a good word to describe the costumes and settings of the Dutch tale, which opens with a charming ice skating sequence that is played for laughs and largely succeeds because of the clever acting of MARION DAVIES and OWEN MOORE. The tale that follows is a case of mistaken identity, with Moore confusing Davies with the burgonmaster's daughter LOUISE FAZENDA, who is engaged in a comical relationship with someone else.Davies has never been better at establishing herself as a comedienne from the start, given lots of bits of business (on and off the ice), including the stay in a haunted mill that occupies that last fifteen minutes of the story and is a good mixture of laughter and fright.Technically, the film looks great with TCM's restoration and a bouncy score that accompanies rather than distracts (as some of the new scores do). Very worthwhile Marion Davies vehicle shows that she did indeed have promise as more than Hearst's favorite protégé.Trivia note: The sets and costumes cry out for early Technicolor but only the night scenes are shaded a blue tint.

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