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5/10
Tepid Drama of Arms Smuggling
bclaireburchill6 January 2006
Warning: Spoilers
"Arms and the Gringo" is a two reel silent melodrama. Directed by William Christy Cabanne and starring Dorothy Gish and Wallace Reid, the film is truly poor.

For instance, the editing of film seems to show Griffith-like techniques at their most over used. The director cross cuts constantly between scenes without any emotional or thematic significance. The only really powerful scene is the last, where Dorothy Gish is manhandled by arms smuggler and is rescued by the handsome American soldier Wallace Reid.

The one surprise in "Arms and the Gringo" is a Mexican-American character. The character is quite stereotypical in keeping with the attitudes of the time, but he does manage to get Wallace Reid's attention at the end of the film and so that he can save Dorothy Gish. This Mexican character may have been inspired by another nameless character in the Griffith Biograph "The Battle at Elderbrush Gulch".

Normally I am very kind to silent melodramas, but "Arms and the Gringo" lacks the direction or the heart to capture my attention. I would not recommend it as viewing for a person who has never seen a silent film.
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The cast is made up of very clever people
deickemeyer27 October 2018
This is a two-reel romance with the scenes laid in Mexico, the author being Anna Tupper Wilkes. Present conditions in that country are used as a basis for the plot. It is all very interesting and many gripping scenes occur. The cast is made up of very clever people. Dorothy Gish has the leading part, the principal members of her support being F.A. Lowery, Wallace Reid, Fred Kelsey and H. Gaye. Good photography and clever direction makes this a most pleasing number. - The Moving Picture World, July 11, 1914
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