Review of The Hoodlum

The Hoodlum (1919)
8/10
A New Mary!!
10 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
"The Hoodlum" saw Mary desperately trying to diversify her screen persona - for the last couple of years fans had kept her as Rebecca, the poor little rich girl and a little princess. She was also getting the enviable reputation of only having the best directors and technicians on her films, but as far as she was concerned it was no secret - if you want the best (Marshall Neilan, Frances Marion) you pay the best. The reviewers noticed, especially on her film "The Hoodlum" where they commended both her and Paramount for never being better. They also couldn't see Mary, who had now been on top for almost six years, as abdicating her throne soon.

Amy's (Pickford) grandfather, Mr. Guthrie, is a hard headed business man and the apple doesn't fall far from the tree as Amy rules the house with tantrums and terrorizing the servants and the poor cat. When contrary Amy decides at the last minute that she doesn't wish to accompany her granddaddy on his European holiday he banishes her to her father's care when father takes up residence in the heart of the Bowery. The film's by line is a bit misleading "a spoiled young girl forced to fight for survival in the slums and alleys"!! giving the impression that much of the film is about her effort of trying to fit in with her new found acquaintances. There are some funny scenes regarding her initial feelings at being forced to give up her Park Avenue luxuries for survival in the slums (there is a scene where Amy imagines she is living in a pig sty - it was handled better in "Poor Little Rich Girl") but almost the next scene shows her as the leader of the gang, shooting craps with loaded dice, dancing a shimmy for the entertainment of the street and the funny but inevitable police chase. A funny scene shows Amy bewailing the fact that she is coming last in the class whereas at the start a wheedling tutor told her the only person smarter than herself was her grand daddy!!

There is also a slum scene of dramatic reality - when Amy is taken by a little girl to visit her sick mother you see a drunkard's room with a swag of dirty rags for a bed and a sick woman with crawling bugs on her pillow. Into this monstrous poverty comes a "stranger on the third floor" - it is Amy's grand-daddy who in his disguise as old Mr. Cooper is horrified by Amy's "hoodlum ways". Amy has also caught the eye of William Turner (Kenneth Harlan) who is working on an undercover dossier on the crooked business practices of Mr. Guthrie who was responsible for sending him to prison on a falsified charge.

It all climaxes back at Park Avenue when Amy and William are caught raiding the safe for the incriminating ledgers, Mr. Guthrie is back, a completely changed man vowing to continue his good works among the city poor. No other reviewer has mentioned what little Dishy is doing in the millionaire's house - there must have been a sequence in which Guthrie adopted the little boy and bought him home to his palatial house but it is missing now. Dishy was played by Buddy Messinger who had been part of a child acting troupe (Virginia Lee Corbin, Francis Carpenter etc) who had starred in a series of "kid pix" directed by the Franklin brothers. They were hugely popular and Mary must have seen what a rapport Sidney Franklin had with children because his direction of Mary and the slum kids is the best part of the movie!!
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