(1910)

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5/10
The Lesson review
JoeytheBrit14 May 2020
Another sermon from D. W. Griffith, a filmmaker who could be insufferably pious at times. Drink is once again the devil's ally, causing Joseph Graybill to forget the commandment about honouring thy father, and forcing his clean-living sister to search for him in a series of sordid drinking holes when their old man is on his deathbed (or deathchair, in this case).
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The power it exerts upon an audience cannot be questioned
deickemeyer11 October 2015
At one time the Biograph Company had quite a reputation for sermons. Here is one which has much of the original flavor, representing a young man disobeying the wishes of his father, a minister, to become a preacher; sinking lower and lower until just as his father dies he kills a man in a saloon brawl, and but for the plea of a sister would have been taken to prison, even as his father died. Whatever may be thought of this type of picture individually, the power it exerts upon an audience cannot be questioned. Like the horrible examples graphically shown in the goody-goody Sunday school books these films possess a fascination which cannot be denied, yet perhaps few would care to acknowledge its influence. The dramatic attractiveness in this particular instance consists in reproducing a domestic scene, unhappily too common, in some of its aspects at least, in such a way that the events seem to be transpiring before the audience. It is a graphic and impressive illustration of the commandment to honor, which means obey, one's parents. - The Moving Picture World, December 31, 1910
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