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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Clara Beranger (adaptation)
Zona Gale (novel) (play)
Release Date:
November 1921 (USA) more
Awards:
1 win more
User Comments:
Powerful Drama Told With Restraint more (4 total)
Cast
(Credited cast)| Lois Wilson | ... | Lulu Bett | |
| Milton Sills | ... | Neil Cornish | |
| Theodore Roberts | ... | Dwight Deacon | |
| Helen Ferguson | ... | Diana Deacon | |
| Mabel Van Buren | ... | Ina Deacon | |
| Mae Giraci | ... | Monona Deacon (as May Giraci) | |
| Clarence Burton | ... | Ninian Deacon | |
| Ethel Wales | ... | Grandma Bett | |
| Taylor Graves | ... | Bobby Larkin | |
| Charles Ogle | ... | Station Agent |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
71 min
Country:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Zona Gale re-wrote her novel into a play, which was first produced by Brock Pemberton at the Belmont Theater, New York. The premier took place on 27 December, 1921. The following cast was featured: Carroll McComas as Lulu Bett, William Holden as Dwight Deacon, Catherine Doucet as Ina Deacon (billed as Catherine Calhoun Doucet), Jack Lionel Bohn as Bobby Larkin (billed as Jack Bohn), Willard Robertson as Neil Cornish, Louise Closser Hale as Miss Bett (misspelled as Louis Closser Hale), and Brigham Royce as Ninian Deacon, plus Lois Shore as Manona Deacon and Beth Varden as Diana Deacon. more
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This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (4 total)
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We may never know exactly how good or bad a director William C. de Mille was. Only a handful of his films survive and only one of the surviving films, "Miss Lulu Bett", is revived with any regularity. But if a director is going to be known by one film, he or she could do much worse than "Miss Lulu Bett."
The film is a fine example of film-making on a small scale. Little touches remind audiences of the simple beauties of the moving image art form. There is the image of the lonesome and shy Lulu (played by Lois Wilson)unfurling her hair on a staircase. There is the image of Lulu and her lover Neil Cornish (Milton Stills) talking under a bower strewn with flowers. These images of delicate beauty show what carefully chosen props and settings can do to make a film with a modest budget look classy.
The story is interesting and it is not as old fashioned as some on-line reviewers have suggested. Lulu is not physically abused or held in captivity. She is abused psychologically by her overbearing brother-in-law, and her captivity is a matter of economics: she simply has no money to live on her own. The belittling of women and economic inequalities are still important issues for women.
Some people may object to certain stylistic qualities of "Miss Lulu Bett". The film has a fast enough pace, but much of the story is told through title cards. I presume that the overuse of language is a hold-over from literature: "Miss Lulu Bett" was originally a popular stage play and novel. These title cards, however, are pithy and straight-forward; they never seem to interfere with the pace of the film in any way. Film critics who ignore the device in silent films may want to watch "Miss Lulu Bett" as an example of title cards used well.
In all, "Miss Lulu Bett" is a fine drama about a female survivor of abuse. The artistry is touching and low-key, but captivating all the same. It is truly a fine work from William C. de Mille, a director whose career is now almost erased from film history.