The Jack-Knife Man Explained

The Jack-Knife Man
Director:King Vidor
Producer:King Vidor
Starring:F. A. Turner
Cinematography:Ira H. Morgan
Studio:King W. Vidor Productions
Distributor:First National
Runtime:60 minutes
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

The Jack-Knife Man is a 1920 American silent drama film directed by King Vidor and his debut film with First National. A story of Christian charity and the virtues of self-help, the work reflects his "Creed and Pledge", a declaration of his artistic principles published the same year.[1] Prints of the film survive in several film archives.[2]

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[3] Peter Lane (Turner), known as the "jack-knife man" because he spends his time whittling objects from wood, selling them to earn a living, loves and is loved by the Widow Potter (Leighton), desisting from matrimony for reasons known only to himself. When a hungry child, "Buddy," comes to his houseboat in quest of food, Peter asks and receives the aid of the Widow Potter. Returning to the boat he finds the boy's mother, dying, and he buries her and adopts the boy. A while later a tramp, "Booge," joins the queer family and refuses to be ousted. The three become inseparable companions. Then a busybody parson seizes the boy and insists on finding a home for him, placing him with the Widow Potter. Time passes and Peter becomes widely sought as a maker of wooden toys. After some developments of a startling nature, his financial position improves, and Peter marries the widow and all are happy.

Cast

Production

The Jack Knife Man was the first picture filmed at Vidor's newly constructed 15-acre studio, "Vidor Village" in Hollywood, California.[4] The new studio was part of a joint venture by King Vidor and First National to create films, independent of the major studios, to show at First National's numerous theaters. Vidor paid for the construction of Vidor Village with a portion his $75,000 advance from the exhibitors.[5] Exterior scenes were filmed in Stockton, California.[6]

Theme

Vidor issued his "Creed and Pledge" in Variety magazine shortly before directing The Jack-Knife Man, a manifesto of his artistic and social ideals inspired by the precepts of Christian Science:[7]

I believe in the motion picture that carries a message to humanity.

I believe in the picture that will help humanity to free itself from the shackles of fear and suffering that have so long bound it in chains.

I will not knowingly produce a picture that contains anything that i do not believe to be absolutely true to human nature, anything that could injure anyone or anything unclean in thought or action.

Nor will I deliberately portray anything to cause fright, suggest fear, glorify mischief, condone cruelty or extenuate malice.

I will never picture evil or wrong, except to prove the fallacy of its line.

So long as I direct pictures, i will make only those founded on the principles of right, and I will endeavor to draw upon the inexhaustible source of good for my stories, my guidance and my inspiration.

A story of human redemption, the protagonists are rewarded with ultimate success, but only after a bitter struggle with nature in a desolate and threatening landscape, reflecting Vidor's own "ambivalence towards nature".[8]

Despite a number of humorous interludes and the happy ending, the overall effect of the film is one of "relentless realism".[9]

References

Notes and References

  1. Baxter 1976, p. 9-10
    Callahan, 2007: "The Jack-Knife Man, a" small variation on Silas Marner that showed the director thinking through the idea of Christian charity."
  2. Web site: The Jack-Knife Man . January 10, 2014 . American Silent Feature Film Survival Database.
  3. Reviews: The Jack-Knife Man . Exhibitors Herald . 11 . 8 . 91 . Exhibitors Herald Company . New York City . August 21, 1920 .
  4. Brownlow 1979 p. 98: King Vidor and his spouse, actress Florence Vidor, "had their own small studio - 'Vidor Village' - on Santa Monica Boulevard."
  5. Baxter 1976 p. 9
    Durgnat and Simmons, 1988 p. 25
  6. Baxter 1976, p. 9-10
  7. Durgnat and Simmons, 1988 p. 31
    Baxter, 1976. P. 10
  8. Baxter 1976: p. 9: Vidor's "disquiet about natural forces…" and p. 11
    (Senses of Cinema 2007: "the fight against the neutral destructiveness of nature."
  9. Baxter 1976, p. 11
    Callahan, 2007: "...a small variation on Silas Marner that showed the director thinking through the idea of Christian charity".