Damaged Goods (1914 film) explained

Damaged Goods
Director:Tom Ricketts
Starring:Richard Bennett
Adrienne Morrison
Cinematography:Thomas B. Middleton
Studio:American Film Manufacturing Company
Distributor:Mutual Film Corporation
Runtime:7 reels
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

Damaged Goods (1914) is an American silent drama film directed by Tom Ricketts, starring Richard Bennett. It is based on Eugène Brieux's play Les Avariés (1901) about a young couple who contract syphilis. No print of the film is known to exist, making it a lost film, although according to the silent film survival database a fragment survives.[1] It is believed to have begun the sex hygiene/venereal disease film craze of the 1910s.[2]

The play was adapted into a British silent film Damaged Goods in 1919. A sound film based on the Brieux play, also titled Damaged Goods (1937) was directed by Phil Goldstone, released by Grand National Pictures.

Cast

Production and release history

Film historian Terry Ramsaye stated that the film was "pretentiously made" for a cost of less than $50,000, including marketing, and that "its states' rights ... sold for $600,000, thus indicating a box-office take of probably more than $2,000,000". According to a 1915 account, audience demand for the film in Detroit was so great that police were required to control the crowds at the theater.

Damaged Goods was re-released in a "new edition" in 1917, perhaps in response to concerns about the spread of venereal disease among World War I soldiers. It was re-released again in 1919.

Reception

The film was positively received by critics. Reviews in Variety and The Moving Picture World praised it as morally salubrious.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Damaged Goods / Thomas Ricketts [motion picture] ]. memory.loc.gov . January 19, 2024.
  2. Eric Schaefer, Bold! Daring! Shocking! True!: A History of Exploitation Films, 1919-1959 (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1999).