Stella Dallas (1925)
8/10
A weepy but enjoyable old film...and the original.
29 July 2020
"Stella Dallas" is a weepy film about a long-suffering mother who gives everything to do what's best for her child. This sort of picture was very common back in the day, with films like this, "So Big" and "Madame X". And, they proved popular enough that they were remade again and again. Apparently the public loved weepy movies about mothers!

As for me, I've seen the first remake of this. "Stella Dallas" (1937) was a very well made Barbara Stawyck vehicle and it was remade yet again with Bette Midler a couple decades ago. The 1925 version is the first...a pretty silent picture that might be best viewed with a box of tissues nearby!

When the story begins, Stephen Dallas (Ronald Colman) is rich and happy an looking to marry the neighbor girl. However, his father was apparently embezzling and when it made the newspapers, the old man killed himself. Stephen, wanting a fresh start, moved to a small mill town where he got a job as a lawyer for the company.

Stella (Belle Bennett) notices the handsome young man and invites him to dinner. Almost immediately after, they marry and have a little girl. However, all is not good, as the unsophisticated Stella never really fits in with society....and her new 'friends' do little to help her. She is, essentially, a bit rough around the edges...but you wonder why Stephen didn't help her with this.

Soon Stephen receives a promotion and when he returns home to tell Stella, he finds Mr. Munn in the house. Munn is a guy she met at the race track and she invited him home for dinner with them. Not surprisingly, Stella's not thinking about what others might think about her bringing a man home and Munn's beer drinking didn't do much to make Stephen like him! To make things worse, Stella refuses to go to New York for Stephen's new job...and so he goes alone...hoping that Stella and the baby will soon join him. But instead, years pass and Stella is still back in this small town with her child who will soon be a young lady. And, Stella is spending a lot of time with Munn...and local tongues are certainly wagging over this. And, Stephen was lonely as well and began seeing a local widow. Not surprisingly, although Stephen and Stella are still married, the days are numbered for that marriage. What's next and how does the child play into all this? See the film and find out for yourself.

I was surprised when I watched this film on the Criterion Channel. Why? Because usually silents are shown along with some incidental music but there is absolutely none here....just silence. It's not a huge problem, as some silents have had recent ill-fitting scores added to them....just something you might want to be aware of if you watch.

So is this version worth seeing? Absolutely. It's very well made...with a nice cast and production values. It was obvious that this was a prestige project for Samuel Goldwyn and it looks great. My only complaint, and it's small, is that you don't really totally connect with Stella, as she wasn't completely pitiable...and often made stupid choices.
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