Polly of the Circus (1917) Poster

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7/10
Better than the remake!
jennyp-218 March 2005
This was the first production of Goldwyn Pictures and the story is quite different (and better!) than the 1932 remake starring Marion Davies. Mae Marsh as Polly is literally born into the circus and orphaned as a child when her aerialist mother falls from the wires. Young Polly is raised by Toby, a circus clown, and becomes a trick bareback rider. She is badly injured in the ring and is taken to the nearby home of a minister (played by Vernon Steele) to recover. Polly thrives during her stay of several months, and the pair fall in love. Naturally, the town gossips are agog. After learning that Toby has fallen ill and needs money for a doctor, she enters a horse race with her circus mount Bingo and wins. But it's too late, Toby has died. After a few more downward turns, it all works out in the end. Mae was sweet, the horse race exciting and well-shot and the circus scenes (featuring a real circus) are authentic.
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8/10
Requires multiple viewings - outrageous racing and circus scenes
Nate-4818 October 2020
The first goldwyn picture pulls out all the stops - the racing scenes are as good as it gets - circus scenes brilliant - acting is great
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6/10
Who Doesn't Like the Circus?
boblipton30 May 2013
This early Goldwyn picture is an ambitious piece that intended to nurture not only the corporation, but its star, Mae Marsh, recently poached from D.W. Griffith. It is a pretty good effort, with its Mark Twain-style opening, although the many titles and overt sentiment drag a bit until Lilian Ward falls from the high wire.

After all the kids grow up, a decent plot involving ministers, the circus and a well-photographed horse race ensue and matters are satisfactorily resolved at the end. The modern viewer may have some issues, like the white actors in blackface, but Mae Marsh is her charming, fluttery self. It was undoubtedly an excellent money-maker for the Goldwyn Corporation (later MGM) and a boost in the careers of not only the uncannily named Edwin Hollywood, but cinematographer George W. Hill, who a dozen years later would be MGM's go-to director for rough fare.
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Charming Mae Marsh
drednm31 May 2013
Mae Marsh stars as Polly, a traveling circus performer raised by Toby the Clown (Harry La Pearl) after her mother Nanette (Lilian Ward) takes a dive off the high wire. Polly is injured (in the same town)and taken into the home of the handsome minister (Vernon Steele) to recuperate, against the wishes of narrow-minded old deacon (Charles Riegel) and his jealous daughter (Lucille Southerwaite).

The townspeople can't stand the idea of a circus girl in the minister's house, where's she tended by servants (Lucille La Verne and Richard Lee in blackface). But the minister is stalwart and Polly gets revenge by winning the big $500 dollar horse race on her white horse Bingo.

Marsh is very charming and nicely photographed at the height of her stardom. Steele is quite good as the minister. La Pearl is interesting (and only 33 years old) as the old clown. Also good is Wellington Playter as the circus boss.

Standout scenes include the big horse race (at a race track bigger than the muddy little town) and a funny scene in which the singing church ladies try to drown out the circus jazz band.

As noted, there is a Mark Twain kind of nostalgia thing about boys running away to join the circus and even in 1917, a nostalgia about traveling circuses.

Lilian Ward as Nanette (Polly's mother) is oddly missing from the credits on IMDb and on the DVD packaging.
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6/10
Nothing Has Changed
Britney-Keira4 September 2021
194 years after the movie and we still have pharisees in the church - judging others and pointing their boney old fingers without showing love, or mercy.

Pointing this out was the highlight of this movie.

It is a pity the final scenes were so rushed, there needed to be another fifteen minutes to wrap things up without rushing it so much.
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7/10
Flawed - not essential - but good
I_Ailurophile16 February 2022
Oh, silent films, At their best they stand tall with the greatest titles that cinema has had to offer in all the years since "talkies" first premiered. Even when a silent picture is less than perfect, they still tend to be duly entertaining - yet at their most unwieldy, these early movies bear unmistakable indelicacies that limit our engagement. Such difficulties may include (and are not limited to) stilted plot development, an overwhelming sense of staged inauthenticity in the way each scene is put together, or overzealous use of intertitles that make a feature feel more like the simple relation of written words with select moments given visual depiction. To varying degrees, 1917's 'Polly of the circus' seems to carry each of these issues. That doesn't mean that it's not enjoyable, or a suitable diversion in its own right - but I think this may land among those silent pictures that typify what some modern viewers, struggling to engross themselves in the era, find arduous about it.

That's the bad news, alongside use of blackface (sigh), instances of sexism, and the fact that this probably isn't a movie I'd suggest for someone who isn't already enamored with silent films. Still - 'Polly' is an admirable production, rather grand when you consider the many extras, the build of scenes including circus acts, stunts generally, and the animals involved. The feature plays with timeless themes: frivolity versus uptight social expectations; relatively progressive values (as reduced to a direly simplified representation here as "the entertainment industry") versus tradition and moralizing cultural norms; charity and compassion versus zealotry and unmoving rigidity in personal beliefs; maturation and personal growth; young love; and so on. Whether these themes are utilized to meaningful ends is one question for each viewer to ask for themselves - and another is if these themes are overdone, undercooked, or just right as they appear.

For what it's worth, more so than not I think 'Polly of the circus' comes off as a success. True, even putting aside specific thematic content, there are antiquated norms and values herein that one must abide. However, I'm gratified to say that these are actually repudiated by the film in its course of events. Moreover, the narrative is complete, and compelling enough to hold at least my interest. Intertitles and characters serve their purpose; scenes are capably dynamic in their writing and realization to keep one's attention, if not raptly. Yes, very plainly, some bits are certainly more rich, absorbing, and otherwise worthy than others - but then, so it is with most movies, no? The performances of the cast are likewise just stimulating enough, characterized by modest illustration of nuance, range, and physicality, to provide some believable hint of the actors' skills, and to bring the roles to life.

I think one needs to remember that 'Polly of the circus' is a product of its time - not to excuse any problems it may have, but to reflect that the type of entertainment it has to provide is much simpler, geared for a different audience in a time and society that has changed so very much. If I were watching this in 1917, maybe I'd be singing another tune. Even with that context, though, I think this effectively only just rises above being merely "passable." I like it well enough - honestly, I want to like it more than I do, and at the same time wonder if I'm being too generous. But I think it's safe to say this is a picture to view out of curiosity and broad interest in cinema rather than particular need or desire. Everyone involved does their part, and does it well, to craft the motion picture. It's just that even with a strong finish, the end result doesn't wholly demand viewership in the way the best of movies do; the real-life history of the title (its special meaning for Goldwyn Pictures, which would in time become MGM; its seeming loss, and eventual discovery in the Yukon) almost threatens to overshadow the content.

'Polly of the circus' is worthwhile if you happen to come across it, but I don't think you need to go out of your way for it. Recommendable especially for those who already have a soft spot for the silent era.
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8/10
Not Enough of Mae's Wonderful Expressive Face!!
kidboots9 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
In 1916 Goldwyn Pictures was established but initially it was not a success. Goldwyn (still Goldfish) noted that it was "the player, not the play, which was the thing" and was determined to engage the top actresses from stage and screen. From the stage came Jane Cowl, Maxine Elliot, Madge Kennedy and opera diva Mary Garden and lured from other producers were Mae Marsh and Goldwyn's current love Mabel Normand. But something happened - Madge Kennedy was the only stage star who made any impact, Mabel Normand stopped being funny and Mae Marsh seemed lost without her mentor D.W. Griffith, in fact Photoplay ran an article entitled "Where Is Mae Marsh?"

"Polly of the Circus" was the first Goldwyn production and was important for a number of reasons - sweet Mae Marsh found herself earning more money than she had ever seen before and she met Louis Lee Arms, a publicity director who became her husband. Even though Goldwyn wasn't happy with the film or the star, critics of the day praised her performance saying she "demonstrated her right to be called the best actress of the shadow stage" and the film did set him on his way!! Goldwyn pulled out all stops for his first production with a special introduction to "Miss Mae Marsh" but she didn't get much of an opportunity to show her fans her "Little Sister" persona in this long winded circus tale.

Starting off as a "Tom and Huck" tale with Johnny and Jim (played by the Carr brothers) playing hooky to go to the circus, they meet little Polly, whose mother has just been killed in an accident and Jim decides to stay with the circus. Years pass and the circus comes to town once more, Johnny is now the town parson, Jim is the "boss man" of the circus workers and Polly (Marsh) is "the world's most famous equestrienne". While performing her double somersault her beloved horse Bingo is startled by the crowd and Polly, seriously hurt, has to leave the circus to recuperate at the Parsonage. But suddenly the parson is besieged by the town's folk who don't want this flighty circus girl in their town.

There was such a lot of plot, Polly wins the local derby (shades of "Mickey") in order to use the prize money to give her old guardian, who is a clown with the circus, a chance to regain his health but she is too late. She is also forced to rejoin the circus fearing Johnny will be run out of town if she doesn't and there is the usual climax of a fire (which would have been quite novel in 1917) which brings everyone together. There is even a town "bad girl" - the Deacon's daughter who is determined to get Johnny to the altar by any means but considering that the main story takes place over some years I think she is very, very slow!!

I think Mae Marsh excelled in little "vignette" movies like "Hoodoo Ann" that ambled along but provided incisive, dramatic characterizations that allowed her to show her beautiful expressive face - which wasn't seen to full advantage here.
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8/10
Of Prejudice and the Circus!
JohnHowardReid22 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Sam Goldwyn's lavishly produced first film set the pattern for the 138 other big-budget offerings he was to make right up to his final roadshow, "Porgy and Bess", in 1959. One thing that Goldwyn never stinted was money. He always ran up big budgets and always bought the best talent he could find for both sides of the camera. Director Charles Horan had handled stars like Mary Miles Minter (in 1915's "Rose of the Alley") and Lionel Barrymore (in 1916's "The Upheaval"). Here he has none other than Mae Marsh (riding strong from her string of 1916 super-successes, namely Hoodoo Ann, A Child of the Paris Streets, A Wild Girl of the Sierras, Intolerance, The Marriage of Molly O, The Little Liar and The Wharf Rat) in the title role, supported by a then very popular leading man, Vernon Steele, who blotted his copybook so far as picturegoers were concerned by accepting leading roles on Broadway in Ladies of the Evening (1924) and The Importance of Being Ernest (1926). When he returned to Hollywood, the only roles he could rustle up were minor character appearances in movies like Big News (1929) and The King's Vacation (1933), plus uncredited bits here and there right up until he retired in 1949. Harry La Pearl, here making his final of 18 movies (most of them shorts) was a real circus clown who presumably spent the rest of his life (he died in January, 1946) back in the circus. Another strong performer in the movie would have to be Charles Riegel as the aptly named, Deacon Strong. Yes, suffice to say that nearly all the roles in this movie are well played. I would make an exception for the ghastly impersonations contributed by Lucille La Verne and Dick Lee, but fortunately their joint appearances are brief. The domestic scenes with their realistic heartstrings and conflicts were otherwise convincingly directed by Charles Horan, while the aptly named Edwin L. Hollywood staged all the spectacular big budget episodes involving a real traveling circus and then the final horse race. Available on a very watchable Alpha DVD.
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