Suds (1920)
8/10
Mary Pickford is brilliant
6 February 2022
Amanda Afflick (Mary Pickford) is a laundry worker in London early in the 20th century. She is small and weak and the other girls at the laundry pick on her, but she has one consolation: she adores a male customer who left his shirt eight months ago. In front of her colleagues she pretends he is her lover and she is the disowned daughter of an 'arch-dook'. A sub-plot tells how she saves the ancient horse that pulls the laundry cart from being sent off to the knacker's yard. If there is any single film that demonstrates what a great actress Pickford was it is not one of the pictures where she plays a little girl; it is this one. Without any camera tricks and with minimal makeup she manages to appear as an entirely different person - small, wizened, with hunched shoulders and pinched face, whose underlying beauty becomes apparent only at second sight. 'Suds' tells a story that is not particularly happy but it is still full of humour and even of slapstick-like fun (the film exists with several endings, I saw the version where Amanda and her true admirer are reunited with the horse in the countryside). In the course of her career, Pickford would make more sophisticated pictures, for my taste reaching her high point in 1927 with 'My Best Girl'. However, 'Suds' is incomparably better than the earlier efforts of her that I have watched and it showcases her talents perfectly. Highly recommended!
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