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  • This is a little fun piece by Mary and it allows her to let go to a chirpy carefree girl. Pickford always seems to leave a few precious moments in all her movies and you always get the feeling they are spontaneous and, there are a number of them here as well.

    Her climbing on table to give a hug to big grown men showing just how small she is, but so cute and fun. There is a point where Mary stalks the teacher just prior to trying to hopelessly hide behind a very small tree. The long shot of the teacher in front and Mary stalking behind is just so Monty Python - and is just one of those small pieces that builds the overall feeling of this little movie.

    There are few points where you can read Mary's lips very clearly and it was intended which gives momentary intimate feeling with her.

    The support cast were just great especially the old man who almost up-stages Mary.

    The plot line doesn't kick in until well into the movie and so you get the feeling of just floating around having some fun until the movie 'starts'. Not a great story line or plot development however the performance of all the characters are in fact the movie.

    There is always something to see in a Pickford movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Not surprisingly, Mary Pickford plays a teenager in this film, though at the time she was 28. She played a young girl or teen in most of her movies of the period and the audiences of the day ate them up--making her the biggest film star of the day. While today you might laugh at the idea of a woman playing such childish roles, they were often very, very good--such as in "Sparrows" and "Daddy Long Legs". This one, however, is very far from her best. While it's enjoyable enough to make it worth seeing, the film lacks the charm of most of her other full-length films.

    Mary plays a "Tom boy" in this film--again, a pretty familiar role. However, seeing her running about shooting everyone with a slingshot and the infusion of so much humor (or, attempted humor) make this one a bit harder to enjoy.

    Her father is an alcoholic who she loves despite this. Oddly, after drinking heavily, the film says he is having a case of the D.T.s--like it is funny! First, D.T.s occur when you are withdrawing from alcohol--not when you are intoxicated. Second, the condition often resulted in death! Not exactly a funny topic for the film! In another part of the country, a rich man has just died. However, his servants are evil and conspire to locate the long-lost heiress (the simple poor girl, Mary Pickford) and steal her fortune. And, in the process, they end up framing the poor old school teacher--and the locals are thrilled with the idea of a hanging! Will the nice school teacher escape the crazed mob? Will Mary get what's rightfully hers? Will the town get some sort of "necktie party" to give them what they want? Tune in to see.

    The film has a few problems other than Mary's penchant for using her slingshot. First, the way the innocent school teacher got convicted seemed a bit silly. Second, there is a romance at the end between Mary and the school teacher that seemed to come from out of no where--plus it seemed a bit inappropriate due to her age and his position as her teacher. Overall, a bit of a disappointment. Whatchable but not especially good or deep.
  • I have little or anything to add the comments of others who have spotted this movie for what it is, a story-vehicle for Mary Pickford, which is okay.

    The story itself isn't worthless but it feels a little worn in. I did however appreciate the messages ingrained in about families not being traditional, it's mediations on alcoholism, vigilantism and even pedophilia are interesting peaks into a time and a place we missed, but they don't occupy a lot of screen time. Some of the cinematography is great, but really the supporting cast is excellent, in particular the drunk old dad.

    The most relevant story convention is that of the indigent people ousted by cruel capitalist bent on their land, but that story is told better in both "Tess of the Storm Country" and "Heart O' The Hills" (this movie is featured on Milestone's "Heart O' The Hills DVD release.)
  • This adaptation of the Bret Harte story is a ready-made vehicle for Mary Pickford, with a blend of comedy and melodrama that allows her to perform a lot of different material. Although there are some serious story developments, the tone is usually kept rather light, and Pickford is as engaging as ever.

    The story has her playing a wild daughter of a now-destitute miner, meeting the town's new schoolteacher, and contending with a plot to deprive her father of an inheritance. Actually, some of the incidental sequences are the best, and give her the best opportunities to develop her character while entertaining the audience.

    Theodore Roberts is sympathetic as the father, Thomas Meighan is solid as the schoolteacher, and some of the other cast members get an occasional good moment. The story largely follows a familiar formula, but it works, and it provides good entertainment with a great leading actress.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    M'Liss is the quintessential feisty, self-sufficient adolescent girl, that Mary Pickford naturally played the best. This story is about a bold and sassy girl, more mother than daughter to her alcoholic father, who is killed leaving the girl to fend for herself. M'Liss is also an amusing parody on Westerns, with the brazen girl holding up stagecoaches with a slingshot and romping around the countryside like a wildcat. Theodore Roberts is adorable as her drunken father , with his sole asset Hidegarde, the chicken he guards so lovingly as her eggs are traded for whiskey. All the supporting actors are very good in their roles. I especially enjoyed Charles Ogle, as Yuba Bill who cares for M'Liss in a fatherly fashion. Mary plays M'Liss with her usual combination of charm and pluckiness. There is a scene in the film in which M'Liss carries a snake into a classroom, causing some turmoil. Pickford found out later that the scene, which was not in the script, was a result of a bet between director Mickey Neilan and the crew. Neilan came up with the idea of working a snake into the story and the crew told him Mary would never agree. He laid a bet, and he won. All the exterior scenes were filmed very artistically on location, near Boulder Creek in Northern California, by the outstanding cinematographer Walter Stradling. Though not considered one of Pickford's best films, M'Liss is still very enjoyable to watch.
  • This story boasts a fine silent film star cast, including Pickford, Meighan, and Blue, and the screenplay by Frances Marion has funny moments and title cards to go along with the story of a backwards girl fighting to save the local innocent schoolteacher from being convicted for the murder of her father.

    I loved the moment where Pickford confronts Meighan about the murder. Their faces are close together through the bars of the jail cell and they communicate with eyes and facial gestures alone (no title cards) so that we know what is transpiring between them without a word needing to be said. Beautiful. Meighan had such a strong masculine face, no wonder why he was so popular in the silent days as a leading man and why all the actresses loved to work with him.

    At times the story seems rambling, but half-way through it becomes very cohesive and you really learn to care for these characters and their fate.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "M'Liss" is a pleasant, if pointless, Marry Pickford vehicle. In it, the then-26-year-old played a mischievous teenage mountain girl who sports a slingshot. Mary often played child roles, but it's somewhat unseemly here considering that little time elapses between her character placing a doll in a coffin and grave to her and her schoolmaster falling in love. Today's audiences might also find it interesting to see in the film a public classroom where Bible stories appear to be the main curriculum (and Mary is amusing playing the skeptic).

    "M'Liss" is a mostly breezy and light film, but it would've benefited from further shortening, namely in the plentiful number of title cards. Scenarist Frances Marion deserved much credit for helping to launch Mary's stardom and typecasting her in child roles, beginning with "The Poor Little Rich Girl", and Marion is one of the most important screenwriters in film history, but in the silent era, she sometimes had the vice of talking too much. The subplot of inheritance from a rich relative, which helps tack on a happy ending, was also unnecessary.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It may not be Pickford's best movie, but it's definitely her cutest. I can't help but be a little biased, however: I always felt that her melodramas were a little too dated, and the ones that really last are these scantily plotted, silly comedies that don't take themselves too seriously.

    It's priceless to see her "hold up" a stagecoach with a sling shot, or wonder what "-??-" means when put between "none of your" and "business." (They already showed a willingness to print "damn," so that narrows it down.)

    The inter titles are funny, although in a silent film they don't have to be, and the supporting characters are just as fun to watch as Mary. It's on the "Heart o' the Hills" DVD that came out in '05 as only a special feature, but it's the more enjoyable of the two.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Ok, I learnt western comedies did not see the light of day with 'Destry Rides Again' (1939) but are a far older genre. That's good to know, and it is among the best things I can say about Mary Pickford's 'M'Liss'. Admittedly, the film does have some other good sides. Pickford's acting is as lively as ever, and the scene where M'Liss (the teenage tomboy Pickford plays) 'robs' the stage armed with nothing but a slingshot is actually funny. However, M'Liss seems to terrorise the whole town ('Red Gulch') with that slingshot, and that's neither credible nor amusing. The direction is clunky and relies far too much on the many title cards to characterise the persons who appear in the story. Regarding the pacing, calling it 'uneven' would be charitable. In fact, in about the first half of the film nothing particularly important is happening. Something resembling a plot begins to take shape only from then on. This 'plot', for want of a better word, is actually pretty weird and too convoluted to summarise in what I want to be a brief review. The upshot is that M'Liss falls for her school teacher, who is suspected of murder and in danger of being lynched (he is saved not by her but more or less accidentally by a minor figure). That she and the teacher end up as a couple - notwithstanding her being a minor and a dependant - is one of the weird things about the film. That the actual murderer is a Mexican characterised in an extremely stereotypical way is one of its unpleasant aspects; another one is the fact that the sheriff condones lynching. In sum: apart from the much younger 'Secrets' this is all in all the worst Pickford film I have watched so far.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    An even earlier Pickford outing, available as a bonus on the 10/10 Milestone DVD, Heart o' the Hills, is the delightfully comic western, M'liss (1918), in which Mary is supported by Thomas Meighan. In fact, it's rather surprising to find a movie as sophisticated as this at such an early date.

    The acting is natural yet heartily ingratiating with wonderful performances from the whole cast, particularly Pickford, Theodore Roberts (her dad), Charles Ogle (the stage driver, Yuba Bill), Tully Marshall (the judge), Val Paul and Winifred Greenwood (the villains), and William H. Brown (the sheriff).

    Writer Frances Marion not only delivers fully rounded characterizations, but some really deft insert titles. One note of caution, however, is that director Marshall Neilan and his cutter use a grammar which some people may find difficult to master. I had to switch the movie off halfway through and watch it again from the beginning, as I'd missed half the information the director was so deftly putting across to audiences who were paying attention. None of this pandying to boobs and idiots that modern movies go for, with essential information constantly repeated. If you don't store the M'liss info the first time you read or see it, you'll miss out. That's the way to make a picture!

    Lavishly produced, beautifully photographed and set, M'liss is both a revelation and a delight.
  • Even for those of us who regularly take in pictures from the earliest years of cinema, it's incredible how much variety there sometimes is in the silent era in various ways. Some of the greatest movies ever made hail from the silent era; other movies are less substantial or remarkable. Some filmmakers were innovating and pushing the envelope, while others were happy to provide entertainment for audiences. Some stars remain titanic figures of the medium, countless others carry no significant name recognition decades later, and some had their careers effectively wiped from existence when vault fires or the ravages of time destroyed surviving prints before they could be preserved. With Mary Pickford starring and Frances Marion writing the screenplay, it's safe to say 'M'Liss' has some lasting star power to its name; less certain is that it's otherwise particularly noteworthy on its own merits. It's nothing super special per se, and even if one is especially enamored of the silent era, not necessarily something one must go out of their way to see. Be that as it may, this is very enjoyable by all means, and just light enough on its feet to fly fairly high in that less extraordinary space. In fact, all told, provided one is open to all that comes along with fare from the early twentieth century, I don't think there's much going wrong with this.

    Some facets stand out more than others. Pickford is reliably charming, and for as versatile as she was it's never any wonder how she came to be such an icon. Other cast members may not carry like renown in perpetuity, but perform admirably nonetheless, and among other Theodore Roberts is a minor delight as the title character's father, Tully Marshall as the persnickety town judge, and Charles Ogle as stalwart friend Yuba. I actually quite admire Walter Stradling's cinematography - sharp and focused, and most specifically making exquisite use of natural light in any outdoor shots. While when all is said and done there's a dramatic bent to the narrative, Marion infused her screenplay with marvelous kernels of humor all throughout - in intertitles, in scene writing, and in the characters, above all impudent spitfire M'Liss. True, the storytelling is often kind of direct and bereft of nuance; the dramatic turn a little after the halfway mark is far less than convincing, and in turn, much of the plot that follows thereafter. I assume these qualities stem more from Bret Harte's original story, however, than from any failing on the part of a scribe as accomplished and celebrated as Marion. In any event, there are some swell details scattered here and there in the writing, and though the tale at large may be a bit of a blunt instrument, Marion very commendably enriched it as she could in every other way.

    In addition to great cinematography, excellent acting, and Marion's capable writing, the feature is certainly also a fine credit to director Marshall Neilan, who ably captures the energy of any given moment. This applies to those more somber elements of the plot, yes, though it remains true that as Pickford commands the spotlight as the lovable hellion, any scene that allows her to embrace that vitality invariably comes off best of all. There are even slight airs here of adventure at some points. And 'M'Liss' is well made in all other regards, too: terrific filming locations, sets, costume design, and so on. With all this said, it bears mentioning that the title is unmistakably one of those that in some measure reflects antiquated values. It's never specified exactly how old the protagonist is, but even without observing Pickford to have regularly portrayed children, it's apparent this is another such instance - making it rather uncomfortable that schoolmaster Charles should show any interest in her except as a pupil. It's very welcome that M'Liss boldly repudiates and defies authority figures who bark religious mythology and rigid social mores (and legal norms), and townspeople who leap to conclusions; by the same token, it's evident that such audacity is intended in context more to be cutesy and comedic rather than outwardly laudable. The film is fun overall, but some odds and ends just don't add up, or are even uglier on the face of it than what they are supposed to be.

    It's not perfect. Yet though the flick doesn't immediately make a striking impression, and has its troubles (at least in retrospect), ultimately there's much to appreciate in these seventy-three minutes, and it holds up much better than not. I had my doubts, but this really is a splendid classic. I can understand how silent pictures don't appeal to all comers; I'd have said the same myself, at one time. For those who are receptive to the early days of a developing medium, however, the strengths here well outshine the difficulties, and I'm pleased to give 'M'Liss' my solid recommendation.