Heart o' the Hills (1919) Poster

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6/10
Mary Pickford as a Klanswoman
Cineanalyst19 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Seeing America's Sweetheart Mary Pickford riding with the Ku Klux Klan is strange and unsettling and is in stark contrast to an otherwise pleasant and ordinary silent film. Yet, the KKK is featured in only one episode of this episodic picture, "The Heat o' the Hills". In the film, they are referred to as "night-riders" (a common euphemism for the Klan), and there's no racism included otherwise. The absence of the pointed top from their masks in the film may've been another attempt by the filmmakers to distance the picture from the white-supremacist terrorist organization while remaining faithful to the novel from which the film is based.

On the other hand, this was 1919, and the story is set in rural Kentucky. It was only five years since D.W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation" featured the racist depiction of the KKK saving a Southern community from rapacious freed slaves. Griffith's film largely inspired the revival of the Klan, which theretofore had been suppressed since the Reconstruction era. "The Heart o' the Hills" contains no such racism. Pickford and her fellow Klansmen do, however, take to a night ride to intimidate the "other", which in this case are developers who intend through illegal means to take the locals' lands for exploitation of coal and timbre.

The struggle of preserving a traditional community against the progress of the outside forces of modern society and industry has been a common theme in literature and cinema. Mary Pickford's character finding when to fight against the outside and, ultimately, a balance between the two as she comes of age is what concerns the entire film. It's a pleasant story, if unexceptional and episodic (which is surely a product of being a literary adaptation).

Nevertheless, the subplot of the father's murder could've been dropped and, otherwise, telling it in flashback wasn't ideal. The transitional art titles are nice, but the colloquialisms and the censoring of curse words ("h--l" instead of "hell") can be too much. The film is also musically challenged. The Milestone DVD score is sometimes annoying, and the film itself features a barn dance with some of the worst dancing I've ever seen. Although the story is set in Kentucky, the San Bernardino Mountains of California where the production was actually made is picturesque, and Charles Rosher's camera captured that well. At the very least, "The Heart o' the Hills" is a well-made production from 1919 with interesting subject matter.
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5/10
She'll Be Comin' Round The Mountain When She Comes...
strong-122-4788851 September 2014
When "America's Sweetheart", Mary Pickford, played this film's shotgun-toting, hillbilly heroin, Mavis Hawn, she was 28 years old and her character was 13. (Can you believe it!?)

I don't know about you, but, no matter how cute-n-innocent the petite Pickford may have tried to present herself, she certainly didn't convince me that she was but a mere child.

Pickford's "Mavis" may have been perceived as "pure-as-the-driven-snow" by the naive audience of 95 years ago, but, to me, her deception of age struck me as being downright ludicrous to the 10th power.

Very nicely shot in the mountainous region of Kentucky, Heart O' The Hills is something of a Tom Sawyer/Huck Finn-type "Chick Flick" of woe & injustice.

Pickford plays Mavis Hawn, a simple, "sweet-as-apple-pie" farm-girl whose strong-willed feistiness has made her something of a dead-aim with a shotgun (which she readily reaches for whenever the need arises).

After witnessing the shooting of her beloved father (by someone unknown), Mavis devotes her life to avenging his death. Meanwhile, her mother's farm is being threatened by villainous, rich, city capitalists who will stoop to anything to drive the Hawn family (and others) off their coal-rich land.

In the realm of entertainment, I, personally, consider this (color-tinted) tale of down-home, country comforts to be neither good, nor bad. It was just "OK".

Heart O' The Hills had a running time of just 78 minutes.
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Mary Pickford and John Gilbert Together
drednm26 August 2008
This is certainly an odd film with superstar Mary Pickford playing a simple "mountain gal" in Kentucky who deals with crooked outsiders who want the land for its timber and coal and who will do anything to get it. Episodic in nature the film includes a great comic "barn dance" sequence in what is essentially a solid melodrama about Mavis Hawn and her growth into womanhood.

As always Pickford is super paying the feisty young woman whose father is gunned down before her eyes. Later, her widowed mother (Claire McDowell) marries, but he's in cahoots with the land developers. Pickford spends idyllic days in the mountains with pal Harold Goodwin hunting and fishing and walking through the majestic woods. But tension arises when the local "squire's" son (John Gilbert) catches Pickford's eye and the two guys begin to battle for her attentions.

In an effort to rid the area of the land developers, Pickford joins, in an astonishing scene, the "night-riders." Pickford dons the white sheets and hood of the KKK and rides with the men to scare the land developer but he gets shot and Pickford is accused of murder.

The comic relief in this film is the barn dance and it's a joy to see Pickford and future superstar John Gilbert (then only 22 years old) in the frantic dance sequence, which ends only when an old man loses his teeth on the dance floor.

Mary Pickford never gave a bad performance, and HEART O' THE HILLS is another example of the versatility of this superstar of the silent era. In 1919, Pickford also starred in DADDY-LONG-LEGS, THE HOODLUM, and CAPTAIN KIDD JR.
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9/10
Very impressive vehicle for Mary
overseer-321 May 2003
I watched this film without the usual musical soundtrack accompaniment and was totally hooked from the first few frames nevertheless. Mary Pickford was a little dynamo in her role in this film; I thoroughly enjoyed her and the rest of the cast. Featuring a very young John Gilbert too (here credited as Jack Gilbert), Heart o' the Hills is great entertainment. Mary displays many emotional layers as a strong and independent country girl who has vowed to avenge her father's murder. Along the way she grows up, falls in love, becomes educated, and finds her place in life. A must see for the Mary enthusiast. >
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8/10
A good flowing movie adaption of a very complex book
adt12520 August 2008
The book has been heavily edited and adapted to make it a Mary Pickford vehicle and the result is interesting and enjoyable.

The DVD restoration is good and easy clear viewing, though as noted there as some small artifacts such as eye-whites a little to white - possibly due to the quality of the original film. The music designed and matched with the restoration helps sets the mood and switches according to scene type. It helps develop continuity within the story. I like the music a lot. It reminded me of the Er-Hu music that accompanied some of the Chinese movie Hero.

This movie should be viewed twice as should all Silents unless you have just viewed one. It takes time to adjust and settle into the feeling and rhythm of these movies - only then can you really appreciate and enjoy them.

Almost all Pickford movies demonstrate her micro-actions that subconsciously give depth and human connection with the viewer. Either deliberate, practiced or both they are one of the things that sets Pickford aside from other actors of the period and even today. I think this is a result of Pickford's method acting - her invention - and that what she does comes naturally from making herself the character instead of acting the character.

The smelling of the bible was one; when she meets the pretty woman at the school you see a one or two second 'self-conscious' reaction from Pickford where she shows the characters self-consciousness over her low status clothing. You will note at the side of the dead person she demonstrates her anguish also with her hands, rubbing on the chest of the body which rings very true and completes the scene.

You see this a great deal with Pickford, even in her earliest movies, her hands have a role all of their own and work beautifully and naturally to add reality to her scenes. She loves to touch and uses even the tiniest of movements with her hands and arms - it is worth studying this in her.

Mary rarely gives half a performance and at the time this movie was being made she was having an exhilarating time with her secret lover - Douglas Fairbanks.

They have some fun in this movie as well - the 'shin-dig' has a fascinating dancing scene that needs to be viewed twice. You should also note that when Mary enters that particular scene you have the sense that she is relaxed and in complete charge - a glimpse of the little master amongst her 'juniors'. We briefly get a look at the real life Mary Pickford for a few seconds there. That was obviously a tiny acting over-sight, but a valuable slip for us 90 years later.

This movie needs to be watched twice to pick up what is easily missed on the first viewing - and is much more enjoyable when you stop trying to observe and analyze Pickford.

This is not Pickford's best movie but a good one and well worth watching and collecting.
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Tense, Somber Melodrama With Good Photography
Snow Leopard28 November 2005
The tense, somber melodrama in this Mary Pickford feature is complemented very well by Charles Rosher's photography, which helps to draw you in and makes you feel part of the characters' world. It has very little humor for a Pickford vehicle, and even the occasional lighter moments are almost invariably followed quickly by another serious turn, which keeps the mood serious most of the time.

The story has Pickford's character Mavis battling for survival in the Kentucky hills, seeking to avenge her father's murder even as she contends with outsiders who want to exploit the region's coal. There are several complicating factors, so that the scenario builds up a web of problems for Pickford and the other sympathetic characters to contend with. Among the secondary characters is a very young-looking John Gilbert, who is interesting to watch even though his role is not especially substantial.

Besides the relative lack of comedy, Pickford's character is unusually desperate. There is also a rather unsettling sequence with a vigilante confrontation that evokes some real anxiety, and a courtroom scene that anticipates one of the well-known scenes from "Spartacus". The story packs a lot of drama and tension into an hour and a quarter.

The cinematography helps considerably in making the story work. Despite the limitations of the era (and the damage done to the print over time), it makes you feel as if you really were in the Kentucky hills, with many outdoor shots that work very well, and many details that make the setting and story more believable. Pickford's own performance and screen presence are, of course, a plus to any movie. Amongst her features of the era, this one is good rather than excellent, but it's certainly worth seeing.
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9/10
One of the best
caldoni2 January 2007
Look, no movie is without flaws, and this film is far from an exception to that rule but often while watching it-I'm an aspiring film maker myself-I felt a major rush of excitement a feeling a get sometimes when watching silent films where one suddenly goes "That's where that convention comes from!" It never fails to shoot adrenaline up my spine and put a smile on my face. As a lifelong fan of Mary Pickford, this film is good meter of her abilities. I think it's easy to write her off as "America's Sweetheart" and it's true-plenty of Pickford vehicles were insipid messes, that showcased her own cuteness more than anything else. A friend of mine once said, "She wore the masks of silent film and wore them well but that's about all." While that may be true she also had some real talent. In this film-I won't bother summarizing-Pickford walks a delicate line between cynicism and innocence, which isn't an easy task. There are also some more subtle choices, I personally feel that Pickford was far ahead of her time as far the idea of "microperformance" goes. There's a scene where she's packing some things into a saddle bag and just before loading in her deceased father's Bible she runs it under her nose to smell it. This isn't a big moment it's not a major point of focus and only a little bit of emotion crosses her face as she does, it doesn't feel forced and I would be shocked if it was scripted, it feels a little like Marlon Brando picking up the white glove and trying it on in "On The Waterfront." It doesn't tell you much about the story but volumes about the character.

I could rant all day about how great Mary Pickford is, but honestly while she's more than up for the task there's an abundance credit due to most angles of the production. The photography is world class for it's day throughout and in moments still striking by even the most modern of critiques. The cast is universally wonderful, i can't complain too much about any one character's acting, which isn't not a usual comment I'd make about a film from 1919. Moreover though, I'd like to mention the themes of the piece, they seem advanced far beyond that pale of most film from the early 1900's, or even from the 1940's or so. There's a revenge plot that feels a bit like Peckinpah storyline. There's a deep environmental angle that's as pressing now it was then if not more, development destroys the older ways of life by obliterating the land it plays out on, the canvas of culture is the earth on which it lives. The characters in Heart o' The Hills are poor, they live in Ramshackle cabins and are by all rights in need of the wealth a coal industry would bring them, but they don't want anything to do with it. And why not? It would end their existence as they know it. The second act culminates with Mavis-Mary Pickford's character-going a ride with the Klan to oust the lowlander-developers-which results in a shootout. It's frustratingly unclear what Mavis thinks about the Klan, but her grandfather seems betrayed when he asks her "You were out riding weren't you?" There's a lot balanced portrayals, of people here too. The wealthy elite of the lowlands are portrayed as having no respect for mountain life or the environment but are also seen to be forgiving and even charitable. The mountain people are portrayed as uneducated but more than capable of understanding their circumstances and the consequences of their world. Other pressing themes revolve around child abuse, classroom, and first loves and the ending of childhood.

This film has aged well and not by chance, the film makers treated the material with dignity and humanity, choosing to dwell on themes eternal and important, and yet still it can make you laugh out loud in parts.

I highly recommend this film.
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10/10
Pickford's finest film?
JohnHowardReid9 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Mary Pickford (Mavis Hawn), Harold Goodwin (young Jason Honeycutt), Allan Sears (Jason as a man), Fred Huntley (Jason Hawn, the heroine's grandfather), Claire McDowell (Martha Hawn), Sam de Grasse (Steve Honeycutt), William Bainbridge (Colonel Pendleton), John Gilbert (Gray Pendleton), Betty Bouton (Marjorie Lee), Henry Hebert (Moreton Sanders), Fred Warren (John Burnham), Lillian Langton (Mrs Pendleton), Milla Davenport (Mrs Lippert), Percy Haswell Miss Pritchard).

Director: Sidney A. Franklin. Associate director: Joseph De Grasse. Screenplay: Bernard McConville. Titles: Bernard McConville, Madeline Matzen. Based on the novel by John Fox, Jr. Photography: Charles Rosher. Film editor: Edward M. McDermott. Art director: Max Parker. Producer: Mary Pickford. (Some sources list either Sam De Grasse or Joseph De Grasse as a co-director. The movie itself attributes the direction solely to Franklin on a pictorial title card).

Copyright 10 November 1919 by the Mary Pickford Company. A First National Release. New York opening at at the Strand: 29 November, 1919. Los Angeles release: 7 December 1919. 6 reels. Available on a superb Alpha DVD running 77 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: The local inhabitants of a backwoods mountain community in Kentucky are outraged when one or two of their number plan to sell their land to outsiders who want to mine coal. The local branch of the Ku Klux Klan springs into action and one of the sellers is shot dead. Young Mavis Hawn, who was riding with the Klan, is accused of the murder and brought to trial.

NOTES: Percy Haswell was a woman. She made very few films, but also appeared with Pickford in "Daddy-Long-Legs" (1919).

COMMENT: One of the most beautiful pictures ever made, it's great to have this glorious film now available on such a gorgeous DVD. (Full of "snow", the previous English-titled DVD was simply dreadful, though Miss Pickford still managed to shine despite this awful handicap). This picture was largely shot on location in the San Bernadino Mountains, near Redlands, California. The color photography is so superb, it would pass for three-strip Technicolor if an occasional slight flicker in the background didn't give the process away as tinted and toned. The story, of course, still has plenty of relevance today. The dispute between miners and conservationists still rages. On the acting side, Mary Pickford is utterly convincing both as a child and as a "grown-up", whereas her "Jason" has to be doubled by two actors: Young Harold Goodwin (who enjoyed an enormous career playing minor roles and walk-ons) and grown-up Allan Sears! Next to Pickford, however, the actor everyone will be looking at is actually dashing Jack Gilbert who looks very handsome indeed here in his 42nd movie, thanks to his own innate charm as well as Charles Rosher's superb photography.
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DVD released, the print looks terrible!
jpb5822 May 2005
What in the world happened in the transfer of this film to DVD? The print looks terrible, like someone used a sharpener filter over it so that it has all these little dots around everyone's faces and against objects like trees and such. The musical score sounds monotonous and annoying, all these violins constantly playing the same tunes over and over again! I had to turn the sound off.

What a disappointment. I was looking forward to seeing this on DVD so much because I really like Mary Pickford and John Gilbert. The other feature on the disc M'liss was more enjoyable even though the musical score was mostly a boring piano and it was only in black and white, not tinted nicely as it should have been.
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8/10
Not among her very best, but still very good.
planktonrules30 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I have seen a ton of Mary Pickford's films. While this is a very good one and ranks among her better films, it's certainly not among her best--such "Daddy Long Legs", "Suds", "My Best Girl" or "Sparrows". I think for fans of her films and silents, it is a must-see.

This film is set in the hills of rural Kentucky. While in some ways it's very stereotypical of "hillbillies", it is more sensitive and less sensationalistic than some films set in these parts. Mary plays the daughter of a man who was murdered. Who did it and why is unknown, but in the meantime, she vows to one day find out who it is and get revenge. In the meantime, she lives with a violent mother who is being wooed by a man who is intent on taking her land. The plan is for him to marry her and then sell the land to a dishonest investor who plans on turning the mountainside into a coal mine. Eventually, however, the mine idea is stopped--and the mother, in the meantime, is married to the brute.

Since Mary isn't welcome there, she is adopted by the Colonel--a rich man who had been partners with the evil man who was going to mine the mountain. However, after his partner's death, he discovers the truth and tries to make it up to Mary by having her move from her shack to his mansion. She's quite happy there but her old boy from the hills is heartbroken--as he assumes she'll now marry the well-educated young man (a young John Gilbert) will marry Mary. Will Mary marry the sophisticated Gilbert? Will the murder ever be avenged? Tune in and see.

This is a rather well made film, but it does have a couple odd things. First, when the evil land speculator is running amok, it's the KKK (called "the riders") who come to stop him! Second, like many early films, the black man in the movie towards the end appears to be some white guy covered in burnt cork (a common way to create that lovely minstrel look that was so popular back .YUCK!). Still, despite these rather awful shortcomings, the film is very well made for a silent and is enjoyable. Very nice, but also a tad strange!

By the way, despite the box art looking rather bad, this Milestone release is exceptional. The prints are very good considering their age and an additional Pickford film is included on the DVD..."M'liss".
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