Fool's Paradise (1921 film) explained

Fool's Paradise
Director:Cecil B. DeMille
Karl Struss (asst. director)
Producer:Cecil B. DeMille
Starring:Dorothy Dalton
Mildred Harris
Conrad Nagel
Cinematography:Alvin Wyckoff
Karl Struss
Editing:Anne Bauchens
Studio:Famous Players–Lasky
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:9 reels (8,681 feet)
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

Fool's Paradise is a 1921 American silent romance film directed by Cecil B. DeMille. The film stars Dorothy Dalton and Conrad Nagel. The film was based on the short story "Laurels and the Lady" by Leonard Merrick published in his 1908 collection The Man Who Understood Women. It was adapted for the screen by Sada Cowan and Beulah Marie Dix.[1] [2]

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[3] Arthur Phelps (Nagel) has been injured during World War I and while in a French had become dazzled by the beauty of French dancer Rosa Duchene (Harris). Back in the United States in an oil town along the Mexican border, Arthur meets American dancer Poll Patchouli (Dalton) in a Mexican cantina, and she falls in love with him. Rosa and her troupe are billed for a show in the local theater and while Arthur is waiting at the stage door to see his charmer, he lights a cigar that had been given to him by Poll. The cigar is of the trick kind, and the explosion that follows so injures Arthur's eyes that later while sitting in the theater watching the young French woman dance he becomes blind. Later Arthur wanders into the cantina while Poll is doing an impression of the French woman. Realizing that she has caused the blindness of the man she loves, Poll passes herself off as the French woman, imitating her voice and accent so perfectly that Arthur is deceived, and they are later married. They both live happily until Poll learns of the coming of a great eye specialist who could restore Arthur's sight. She takes him to the physician who restores his sight, and then Arthur leaves Poll and starts a search for Rosa. He finally tracks her down in Siam. After an incident there, Arthur realizes that it is Poll that he loves, and he returns to the Mexican border town in time to rescue Poll from the proprietor of the cantina, John Roderiguez (Kosloff). Arthur and Poll are remarried for the resulting happy ending.

Cast

Production notes

Production on the film began on April 4, 1921, and concluded on June 2, 1921. The film's budget was $291,367.56 and it went on to gross $901,937.79 at the box office.[4]

Release

Fool's Paradise premiered (in an extended 11,000-foot version) at the Criterion Theatre in New York City on December 19, 1921.[2]

Preservation

Fool's Paradise is fully extant. Prints of the film are held by:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Progressive Silent Film List: Fool's Paradise . June 21, 2008. Silent Era.
  2. Web site: Fool's Paradise . afi.com . April 6, 2024.
  3. Reviews: Fool's Paradise . Exhibitors Herald . 13 . 26 . 141–142 . Exhibitors Herald Company . New York City . December 24, 1921 .
  4. Book: Birchard, Robert. Cecil B. DeMille's Hollywood. 2004. University Press of Kentucky. 0-813-12636-3. 165.
  5. Web site: American Silent Feature Film Database: Fool's Paradise . April 6, 2024 . Library of Congress.
  6. Catalog of Holdings The American Film Institute Collection and The United Artists Collection at The Library of Congress p. 61, c. 1978 by The American Film Institute