Review of Soul-Fire

Soul-Fire (1925)
Solid Richard Barthelmess Film
5 July 2009
Richard Barthelmess stars as a wealthy, would-be composer who just can't write any important music. After studying in Italy for a year, he decides he just doesn't have it. An argument with his father causes him to give up his "allowance" and write cheap songs that become the rage of Paris. But he doesn't want to write popular songs, so he gives up writing and descends into poverty in an attempt to find his muse. After tangling with a thug (Walter Long) and killing him, he ships out with the guy's papers.

A quick cut (missing footage?) shows Barthelmess washed up on an island after he has jumped ship. Here he meets and falls for Teita (Bessie Love) who is half English and has a piano. He starts churning out music, but it's only after Love has a scare with leprosy that he realizes he would have stayed and married her no matter what the disease was. He has found his soul-fire.

Interesting storyline has Barthelmess' parents called "stupidly rich," an interesting phrase. The happy ending also belies his actions. Apparently no sacrifice is too great if one is searching for inspiration.
21 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed