Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1911


A Tale of Two Cities (1911 film)

Buy A Tale of Two Cities (1911 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'A Tale of Two Cities' is a 1911 silent film produced by Vitagraph Studios, loosely based on the 1859 novel by Charles Dickens.

Release and reception



The film's three reels were respectively released on February 21, 24, and 25, 1911. Many film exhibitors at this time were hesitant to screen pictures of more than one reel, believing that audiences would not tolerate anything longer. 'The Moving Picture World', however, called for all three reels of 'A Tale of Two Cities' to be screened back-to-back, which possibly inspired Vitagraph to issue its future multi-reel pictures as a single release.

According to 'The Moving Picture World', the staging of the first reel "is little short of sumptuous. There is shown a care in the attention to details which stamps the picture as an unusually faithful reproduction and affords opportunity for those who have read and loved Dickens in the books to see his story move before them, much, perhaps, as it moved before him during its composition." The magazine later listed 'A Tale of Two Cities' among a group of films that adapted classic subjects, positing that these adaptations represented an upward trend of artistic quality in the film industry.

The director Rex Ingram wrote in 1922: "In 1913, when I was studying drawings and sculpture at the Yale School of Fine Arts, a motion picture play, founded upon Charles Dickens' famous story 'A Tale of Two Cities', came to New Haven. It followed in the wake of many cut and dried one-reel subjects, and while this picture was necessarily full of imperfections, common to all pioneer films, it marked a tremendous step ahead in the making of them...I left the theatre greatly impressed; absolutely convinced that it would be through the medium of the film play, to the production of which the laws that govern the fine arts had been applied, that a universal understanding and appreciation of art finally would be reached."Quoted in

Due to the film's enormous success, Vitagraph reissued 'A Tale of Two Cities' in 1913.

Cast



*Maurice Costello as Sydney Carton

*Florence Turner as Lucie Manette

*John Bunny

*Norma Talmadge as The Seamstress

*William J. Humphrey as The Duke D'Evremonde

*Florence Foley as The Woodcutter's Child

*Kenneth Casey as Duke's Son

*Ralph Ince

*James W. Morrison as Peasant Brother

*Julia Swayne Gordon

*Charles Kent as Dr. Manette

*Tefft Johnson

*Leo Delaney as Darnay

*William Shea as Jarvis Lorry

*Mabel Normand

*Earle Williams

*Edith Storey

*Lillian Walker as Peasant Sister

*Helen Gardner

*Dorothy Kelly

*Edwin R. Phillips

*Eleanor Radinoff

*Anita Stewart

*Lydia Yeamans Titus

Notes



References



Sources



*

*

*

*

*

Further reading



*


Buy A Tale of Two Cities (1911 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1911



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1108766680.