Hoodoo Ann (1916) Poster

(1916)

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5/10
Star Vehicle
boblipton14 September 2002
A star vehicle for Mae Marsh. Interestingly, this would be a fairly typical sort of movie for Mary Pickford in three or four years. Here, the first half, set in an orphanage, does not wear well, since the inmates consist of 12-year-old boys and twenty-year-old girls. Rather backwards girls for their ages, except physically. The second half is somewhat better, although the entire production rambles hither and yon and despite some excellent production values -- including a spectacular fire -- never quite makes up its mind as to what it wants to be.

Miss Marsh gives a fine performance, particularly in the comic bits. Robert Harron is, alas, rather wasted. Scripted and produced by D.W. Griffith.
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6/10
Lucky Strikes
wes-connors18 December 2007
Friendless Mae Marsh has been left, as a baby, at "The Clarissa Parker Orphanage", on Friday the thirteenth. Due to the superstitions associated with the date, she becomes known as "Hoodoo Ann". Still, she "lives in sweet unconsciousness of her unhappy lot." Young artist Robert Harron (as James Vance) lives in the same town, on Peaceful Street. One day, Ms. Marsh steals Mildred Harris (as Goldie)'s doll, which seems to trigger some "hoodoo" (bad luck) in the form of a fire; actually, the fire is caused by stepping on matches. Obviously, they are the self-striking kind of matches. Although Marsh hides the doll under a dirty mop, it cleans up well. The fire sequence is well done; and Marsh becomes a heroine. This leads to her eventual adoption.

After riding in a very cool looking early 1900s Ford automobile, Marsh is taken in by a kindly couple. "You are going to stay here and be our little girl," they explain, dressing her in a very funny looking outfit. Marsh gratefully begins to scrub chairs. As luck would have it, Marsh discovers Mr. Harron is her new neighbor, and they begin to date. Harron takes Marsh to see a western move, which they enjoy; oddly, the other members of the audience seem bored. Then, a shooting incident makes Marsh think her "hoodoo" has returned…

The director of record is Lloyd Ingraham; but, it's a safe bet D.W. Griffith, who also wrote the scenario, helped out behind the camera. The story is rather absurd; it's difficult to accept the legend of "hoodoo" based on Marsh's arrival date, and the superstitious palm-reading of "Black Cindy" (Madame Sul-Te-Wan). The cast performs well, considering; notably, young Mildred Harris caught Charlie Chaplin's eye. The folks running that orphanage must have had a parallel place, where they kept the older boys and younger girls. Though "Hoodoo Ann" has charms, they're much better presented in Griffith's similarly-themed, and highly recommended, 1918-19 films.

****** Hoodoo Ann (3/26/16) Lloyd Ingraham, D.W. Griffith ~ Mae Marsh, Robert Harron, Mildred Harris
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6/10
Mae Marsh
fred3f1 January 2006
The movie is not the best. The print I saw was choppy, which may have been due to bits being cut out of it by different people as the years went by. (Projectionist sometimes did this in the early days of film, to make a collection of bits that they particularly liked.)

There is a very thin and predictable plot which distracts from the film. However, there are always some interesting bits in a film that Griffith has something to do with. In this case the fire scene is quite spectacular, especially for the time and particularly when you realize there is no trick photography here. The scene of the lovers on the porch going in and out of the frame is visually creative and works very well. There is also a rather funny parody of the movies from that period and several other surprising comic situations. These also work very well, mainly due to the skills of Mae Marsh.

Some actors/esses are always interesting to watch, regardless of if they are good looking. That is what sets a star apart. Mae Marsh is such an actress, In this film she is very sympathetic and shows an excellent comic gift. She is not a beauty but she still seems desirable and very charming. The comic sequences are successful because of her.

Mae is the main reason for watching this film. She was an unusual actress and it is a pity that only a few of her staring films are available.
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Mae Marsh the Star
drednm25 November 2007
Odd little melodrama written by D.W. Griffith but directed by Lloyd Ingraham for Fine Arts (which I guess was part of Triangle Pictures).

Mae Marsh plays Hoodoo Ann, an orphan girl born on Friday the 13th and seemingly jinxed. A servant foretells that all her life she will be cursed. She's always in trouble because of her nemesis, Goldie (Mildred Harris), who is a favorite at the orphanage. But after the orphanage burns (a great scene) and Ann saves Goldie she is adopted and gets to start a new life. She also meets Jimmie (Robert Harron).

The courtship is sweet and simple as suits the times, and there is a very funny spoof of "pictures" when the lovers go to see Pansy Thorne in her latest movie, a melodrama that boasts hideous acting. But Ann is very impressed and tries to dress and act like the movie actress. She is rummaging through an attic trunk when she finds a gun. It accidentally goes off. She traces the bullet through a door and into a neighbor's house, where the husband is missing.

Ann thinks she shot him and he dragged himself off to die (like the man in the movie). It seems her curse will never be lifted. But he shows up a few days later and the lovers are free to marry. The title cards tell us that the marriage will end her hoodoo.

Marsh is quite good as the unlucky girl and has a few terrific scenes and some really ugly clothes. Harron has little to do. Harris is good as peevish Goldie (in real life she was married to Charlie Chaplin. Co-stars include Anna Dodge (billed as Anna Hernandez), Loyola O'Connor, Elmo Lincoln, and the bizarre Madame Sul-Te-Wan as Black Cindy.

Neat little silent film at 65 minutes and with a good clean print.
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6/10
Hoodoo Ann review
JoeytheBrit29 June 2020
22-year-old Mae Marsh tries to steal Mary Pickford's thunder by playing an orphan who, at the start of this drama, is presumably supposed to be 12 or 13 at the most. She at least refrains from pulling the childlike faces that Pickford's fans found so appealing back then, and is actually quite appealing in the part. The story is slight, though, and the plot feels as if it has been padded out in order to achieve a feature-length running time, switching from Marsh's poor treatment by her fellow orphans to a sort-of murder-mystery once she finds a home. Directed by Lloyd Ingraham from a story by D. W. Griffith.
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6/10
A Classic Herr Griffith Heroine
FerdinandVonGalitzien17 July 2009
Whenever silent fans around the world talk about the Amerikan actress Dame Mae Marsh, inevitably the name of Herr D. W. Griffith is part of the silent chatter due to the importance that the Amerikan director had in Dame Marsh's career, a close and fruitful collaboration indeed. Both silent celebrities started their careers during the pioneers times with Dame Marsh being discovered accidentally by Herr Griffith and then later becoming one of his most distinctive classical heroines.

After having worked with her mentor in the milestone film "The Birth Of A Nation" (1915), Dame Marsh played "Hoodoo Ann" in the silent year of 1916, a film actually directed by Herr Lloyd Ingraham but with a scenario by Herr Griffith. The Dame Marsh character in this small film production has many recognizable elements of Herr Griffith's heroines (not surprising considering who did the script) that this count mentioned before: a little orphan girl ( it is well-known that Herr Griffith has a special fondness for little orphans… ), an innocent and long-suffering child who will overcome many problems during her life with her special persistence.

So we have a classic Herr Griffith heroine who is outspoken and encounters some unexpected misfortunes but finds a handsome and rich fiancée who will bring about a happy ending. However, first an intriguing mystery will have to be solved.

But not all the credit of "Hoodoo Ann" should go to the Griffith/Marsh duo; Herr Ingraham did his part too, directing the film with resolute hand, using elaborate film narratives techniques to entwine comedy with tragedy.

In spite of Dame Marsh being too grown up to be playing a little girl, her performance is honest and unpretentious like the film itself. After all, "Hoodoo Ann" is a small film whose principal intention is to entertain, much like what happens when our heroine attends a "moving pitcher" show, in which she can escape from reality, like so many others, and be fascinated by such an odd invention. Surprisingly, the movies play a strong part in resolving the plot when a curious incident happens in the vicinity; after all, reality is stranger than fiction.

And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must act as godfather to a little but rich German orphan.

Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/
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6/10
Fun Vehicle for the Charming Mae Marsh
richardchatten14 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Her button face still instantly recognisable nearly half a century later in her cameo in John Ford's 'Donovan's Reef' (1963), Mae Marsh as 'Hoodoo Ann' also boasts long luxuriant hair in the first half of this film as a vulnerable young orphan, which she ties back in her mature persona two years later, when the film effectively starts all over again with a new plot.

In the first half she's thrown into panic by accidentally pulling the leg off another orphan's doll; in part two she thinks she's surpassed this early folly by now having accidentally shot someone! But all ends well with her in the arms of Bobby Harron (who curiously no other revewer has mentioned died in a genuine shooting accident just four years later)!

The maturity of post-Griffith mise en scene is in 1916 demonstrated by default by the parody western, "Mustang Charley's Revenge" the two young lovebirds go to see at the cinema, which - perhaps deliberately - is by comparison with the rest of 'Hoodoo Ann' (including the shots of the audience) framed with much more sophistication than the naively made western which resembles a film made nearly ten years earlier.
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7/10
A pleasant little comedy with a slightly muddled plot...
planktonrules24 May 2010
In some ways, this film starring Mae Busch reminded me a bit of some of Mary Pickford's films--such as "Daddy Long Legs" (which actually came after "Hoodoo Ann"). It's like that in that the main character is an older teenager who is worked like a dog at an orphanage and who eventually finds happiness through some nice benefactors--but otherwise, "Hoodoo Ann" is much more of a silly but sweet comedy.

The film begins in the orphanage where, oddly, Ann is treated a lot like Cinderella. However, instead of having two mean step-sisters and a step-mother, all the female residents (who look too old to be there as well as frolicking on a playground) and the matrons treat Ann like a sort of slave--making her do all the work. However, when there is a fire at the place, Ann rescues another girl and is a hero. In response, a nice old couple decide to adopt Ann and take her to live with them. There she meets a nice neighbor (Robert Herron) and they fall in love. There is a subplot involving a doll and a black lady who talks about 'hoodoo' (sort of like a voodoo curse) on Ann--but this really is pretty unimportant to the story.

Now towards the last half of the film, the movie takes a really weird shift--away from a sad tale to a funny film. Ann and her new boyfriend go to the cinema and see a film. As Ann is a bit backward, she takes the film way too seriously. She thinks it's all a bit too real and she also goes home and pretends to be an actress. In the process, she dresses up and plays with a gun she thinks isn't loaded--leading to funny circumstances that really improve the overall film. It's rather inconsequential and silly, but also satisfying--and I don't want to say more as it might give away too much.

Overall, Busch was a very pleasant actress with a nice flair for comedy and pathos--and helped to make the film worth seeing. I liked the film very much--but didn't love it. Incidentally, the film was written by D.W. Griffith but not directed by him.
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8/10
Mae Marsh shines!
ancientnut2 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I enjoyed this movie much more than the other reviewers. Obviously produced as a showcase for the very talented Mae Marsh, the supporting actors are uniformly good and believable. Ms. Marsh is so convincing as the rejected orphan yearning for acceptance and love that she makes you ache to hold and comfort her. There are many fine touches by D.W. Griffith: the spectacular orphanage fire, the two bedtime kiss sequences, the off-screen first kiss, the extended movie-within-a-movie, and the final wedding scene where a nervous Ann asks her groom, "Is it over?" All in all, a very engaging and entertaining combination of pathos, romance, comedy, and murder mystery. I highly recommend this one!
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8/10
Mustang Charley's Revenge
Cineanalyst14 November 2009
This is fun little film, a rather early feature-length silent picture, "Hoodoo Ann". It's episodic and has some other shortcomings, but they don't seem to be as bothersome here. The first part, for instance, is of an orphanage where teenage girls and adult women pretending to be small children (like Mae Marsh, in her early twenties) live beside significantly younger boys. After the orphanage burns down (a rather sensational scene to progress the plot), the second episode is an idyllic coming-of-age romance between Marsh and Robert Harron, which is similar to other such pictures D.W. Griffith made, including "True Heart Susie" and "A Romance of Happy Valley" (both 1919). The final episode involves a dramatic gun accident and mystery, which completely deviates from whatever center the narrative may have once had a semblance of. It doesn't matter, though; it's all entertaining with a mostly light and breezy treatment.

Perhaps the best scene here involves the film-within-the-film, which is between the romantic and climactic episodes--inspiring the climax through life imitating art. Harron and Marsh go "to 'the movin' pitchers'", where they see a more than five minutes long film "Mustang Charley's Revenge". This inner-film is a clever spoof of contemporary William S. Hart Westerns. Carl Stockdale plays the Hart parody and even looks a bit like him. The woman, however, is unlike anyone I've seen in Hart's Westerns, which usually involved a more demure, pure Christian woman rather than the cowgirl Rose played by "Pansy Thorne". This burlesque mercilessly jabs at the plots of Hart's Westerns and at acting styles embracing broad gestures. I'm even one of the apparently few people who enjoy Hart's films today, but, then, that might be why I appreciate the parody as much. Hart seems to have been ripe for satirizing: Keystone, with Mack Swain, parodied him, too, the same year with "His Bitter Pill", and Buster Keaton later made fun of Hart in "The Frozen North" (1922). The entire construction of the film-within-the-film scene is quite good, too, in comparison to similar scenes. It includes cutting back and forth between the projected movie to shots of our surrogates Harron and Marsh watching it. The double-exposure effect is rather seamless; except for when the two enter the theatre, the superimposition is betrayed by overlapping the tops of their heads.

Griffith-veterans Marsh and Harron are very good here. They played similar coming-of-age roles in Griffith's directed films, including Marsh in "The Birth of a Nation" and "The White Rose" and Harron in "A Romance of Happy Valley" and "True Heart Susie". In 1916, they also co-starred in the modern story in "Intolerance". I don't think "Hoodoo Ann" is good just for its good parts overshadowing what would otherwise be problems of an episodic narrative and other unconvincing or far-fetched elements, either; rather, they're insignificant, as they don't interfere with the fun. This is one of my favorite non-"special" pictures, or "programmers" from its time.
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10/10
Enchanting Mae Marsh
kidboots10 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This was the first silent film I ever saw. Technically, I only saw half, as it was featured on a half hour program my mum and dad used to watch called "Silents Please". So I was overjoyed when I saw this film was an extra when I bought "True Heart Susie" and I was not disappointed.

Mae Marsh was such a convincing actress, she was able to play an imaginative orphan even when she was in her twenties. Mae plays "Hoodoo Ann", who was left as a baby on the steps of the Clarissa Parker Orphanage on Friday the 13th. She is the orphanage drudge and is unaware that everyone considers her a jinx!!! Even the other orphans shun her!! In the town Jimmie (Bobby Harron) is an aspiring cartoonist who has no encouragement from his father - "if you think you're an artist - paint the fence!!!" Ann borrows a doll belonging to Goldie (Mildred Harris) the orphanage pet (and a real brat!!) but the doll's leg breaks and Ann feels she can't return it. There are some lovely scenes with Ann playing with the doll - "the only friend she has that doesn't run away".

When the orphanage burns down, Ann is a heroine for saving Goldie and she is adopted by the Knapps. She then meets Jimmie and there is some nice humour involving a new gingham dress, a fence and a cow. Once she realises she won't be going back to the orphanage she gets to work scrubbing the furniture!!!

Two years pass and with dresses by "Vogey" -Ann is now a fashionable young lady going to her first dance. Jimmie and Ann go to the movies - a western - an amazing spoof that deliberately shows how slipshod the continuity was on some of the old films (the heroine goes to the well and each scene shows her with a different bucket, pail is written pale, the hero is shot but the gun is fired into the air). Back at home Ann tries to copy the feisty film heroine and finds a loaded gun in the attic (she doesn't know it's loaded). She is "play acting" - the gun goes off and she thinks she has killed Mr. Higgins, a quarrelsome neighbour. Jimmie has just had some cartoons accepted by a magazine and runs to ask Ann to marry him. She, unhappily, refuses him as she feels her "hoodoo' has returned and she is now a murderess!!!

Just when Ann has confessed to the sheriff, Mr. Higgins rambles in - he had gone off to get away from Mrs Higgin's nagging and slept under a haystack. This paves the way for Ann and Jimmie's marriage and her "hoodoo" is now left behind.

Bobby Harron is very good but Mae Marsh's expressive face is the whole show for me. The acting in this film seems more real and natural than acting today.

Highly Recommended.
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9/10
Super-beautiful Mae Marsh
JohnHowardReid10 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Lloyd Ingraham commenced acting in shorts in 1912 and he started directing them in 1913. By the time he got around to this picture, he had directed some forty shorts and three features including "The Missing Links" on which D.W. Griffith was both a writer and a supervisor. The word "supervisor" is interchangeable with "executive producer" but not with "producer". A supervisor is rarely, if ever, seen on the set. He may make suggestions to the director after viewing the rushes, and he may even make suggestions to the cutter after the movie has been completed. So D.W. Griffith's engagement on "Hoodoo Ann" as supervisor does not mean that he engaged in any actual directing, although he no doubt made suggestions and voiced his approval (or disapproval) of the rushes. Aside from the writing and the photography, for everything else that is good and bad about the movie we have Lloyd Ingraham to thank or to criticize. From me, he has my heartfelt thanks. As for the writing, in this case that is entirely in Mr. Griffith's domain. And a very peculiarly constructed screenplay it is too, although in fact it's a very typical Griffith scenario, built on the same writing lines as "The Birth of a Nation". Griffith is not content with telling one story about his lead character, he likes to tell two or three. Just as "Birth of a Nation" is split in two by the Civil War, "Hoodoo Ann" is split in halves by the fire at the orphanage and we then move on to an entirely different story in which Robert Harron finally makes his entrance and plays a leading part. In "Birth of a Nation", it's Henry B. Walthall who holds the film together. In "Hoodoo Ann", however, it's Mae Marsh. Beautifully photographed by G.W. Bitzer, Miss Marsh really shines and radiates an almost intoxicating warmth and sincerity. The other actors, led by Robert Harron, are there to lend support – and that's exactly what they do! Although there is one possible exception and that's Anna Hernandez (or Anna Dodge and at least four of five other variations in her list of exactly 150 movie appearances). She is really an awesome presence! But fortunately, for the super-lovely Mae Marsh, Anna's role is comparatively small. So those are the two presences I carried away from "Hoodoo Ann": A radiantly beautiful Miss Marsh and a truly awesome Mrs. Hernandez! (I have the budget sheet for this movie. It came in at nearly $30,000 including the cost of burning down the specially constructed orphanage. All this was recouped with thousands to spare at the initial USA splash release at 95 cinemas).
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