Tiger Rose (1923) Poster

(1923)

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6/10
A Mountie May Always Get His Man, But Not His Woman
boblipton31 March 2019
Leonore Ulric is Rose, a French-Canadian girl who was rescued from drowning after her father died. She quickly recovers her health in this movie, and falls in love with Theodore von Eltz, a surveyor out in the mountains for the railroad. Before they can do anything about it, he must deal with someone named Lantry. This consists of accosting him in his tent. They struggle, he pulls a gun, and when it goes off, he dies. von Eltz flees, but Mountie Forrest Stanley pursues. Can he keep his freedom, even with the help of his love?

Sidney Franklin directs this Northwesterner from a play by Willard Mack, produced by Belasco. Miss Ulric -- who would be briefly married to Sidney Blackmer -- originated the role on stage. Most of it is well-run potboiler, with the outdoor shots handled with his usual grace by cameraman Charles Rosher. There's also a fine suspense sequence when von Eltz is hiding in the cellar and Stanley is in the room with the trapdoor above.... however I'm confounded by why he didn't use the other entry, to outside, an get away.

Miss Ulric had made her first film appearance in 1911, but her career seems to have been mainly on the stage, often for Belasco. She is credited with less than 25 screen appearances through 1947, the same year she appeared in a classical repertory company at the Belasco Theater. She died in 1970, aged 78.

The copy I looked at was only 61 minutes long; almost 20 minutes trimmed from the original release. Let's hope that a more complete version turns up.
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7/10
Love in the great outdoors.
mark.waltz21 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This is an exquisite film to look at, beautifully photographed outside among the tall trees of the great North where rivers flow and snowy mountains linger in the background. Theodore von Eltz comes across the young Lenore Ulric, unconscious and floating down the Loon River, and brings her to the local trading post where she recovers. When she comes to, she tells of how she came home one day to find her ailing father dead in their lone cabin in the woods, and left in search of a new life. Von Eltz and Ulric fall in love, but evidence that her father was murdered puts both in jeopardy.

The greatly edited print I found of this looks sensational, but lacks music. It is definitely a film that needs to be seen on a big screen so the viewer can take in the Northwest regions where it takes place. In the scene where Von Eltz discovers Ulric floating down the river, he jumps off his horse and off the cliff into the rugged waters below. The subtitles have indications that the main characters are speaking in English with a strong European dialect of some kind, so they appear to be filled with all sorts of misspellings. But it is certainly a handsome and exotic film to behold. There is a 1929 remake with Lupe Velez and Monte Blue which I hope one day gets a public release.
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