Volume II: Filmography

 

THE STRIKE

 

April 21, 1914 (Tuesday)

Length: 2 reels (1,974 feet)

Character: Drama

Directors: Henry Harrison Lewis and Carl Louis Gregory

Scenario: Carl Louis Gregory

Cast: Muriel Ostriche (Mary MacLaren), Morris Foster (Jim Price), Fan Bourke (Ruth Wheeler), Morgan Jones (John MacLaren), Mrs. M.S. Cooper (Mrs. MacLaren), Eric Jewett, Joseph Sparks (Peter Black), George T. Welsh (Trask), Claude Cooper

Location: Stamford, Connecticut

Notes: 1. Several issues of The Moving Picture World, April 21, April 25, and May 2, 1914, state erroneously that From the Flames was released on April 21, 1914, as does a synopsis in Reel Life, May 2, 1914. The correct release date for that film is April 28, 1914. 2. The synopsis for The Strike, published in the May 3, 1914 issue of Reel Life, give an erroneous release date of April 28, 1914 for the picture. 3. Carl Louis Gregory, co-director of the film and writer of the scenario, also wrote an expanded version of the story, which was published in the June 1914 issue of The Photoplay Magazine. 4. A character surname appeared variously as McLaren and MacLaren in articles and news items.

 

ADVERTISEMENT, Reel Life, May 3, 1914:

"The terrible Colorado labor troubles suggest 'THE STRIKE.' While reports of the bloodshed attendant on the Colorado mine strike are filling the papers, book 'THE STRIKE.' It's the Thanhouser two-reeler just issued that solves the entire labor problem. Conciliation, in strikes, is undoubtedly the thing - there wouldn't be any strikes then! Well, cash in on the present tremendous interest in the Colorado war and benefit the community at the same time. 'THE STRIKE' features Muriel Ostriche and Morris Foster.... The most dramatic and tense mob scenes shown in a film in many months are in this."

 

SYNOPSIS, Reel Life, May 2, 1914:

"Jim Price is engaged to Mary MacLaran, the daughter of John MacLaran, a working man. The little Connecticut factory town in which they live is prosperous, and the workmen have never had any difficulties with Trask or Wheeler, the factory owners, until Peter Black, a professional agitator, comes to the town and incites the men to violence. Price, much to the sorrow of Mary MacLaran and her father, falls under Black's influence and consents to take part in a plot to dynamite the factory. Mary, however, induces him to throw over the conspirators. Black overhears Price disclose the plans to dynamite the factory, and with the aid of fellow conspirators brutally assaults the young workman. Mary goes to the factory to give the alarm, but Black and his men forestall her and while she, Ruth Wheeler, and Mrs. MacLaran are in Trask's office the factory is dynamited. Wheeler is badly injured, and a bullet fired through the window of the office immediately after the explosion strikes Mary. The succeeding scenes of the play are designed to show the ruin which the closing of the factory entailed in the little mill town. MacLaran accepts Mr. Trask's offer of employment in the new factory, which is to be built at Millville, Connecticut, and after Price has given Black a well-deserved beating. The last scene of all shows the MacLarans and Price making their way through the ruins of the village to the railroad."

 

REVIEW, The Bioscope, July 30,1914:

"Such a film as this, dealing with the class hatred and the civil strife aroused by the labour unrest, is unhappily all too topical at the moment, and there is no doubt but that it will evoke a considerable amount of interest and discussion wherever it is shown. By means of an introductory sub-title, the Thanhouser Company make it clear that they designed The Strike as a film with a purpose. It is a vehement plea for the settlement of industrial troubles by arbitration, instead of by the fatal and ruinous policy of strikes. It must be admitted that they give a somewhat one-sided view of the question in this picture, which shows the employer as the innocent and injured party, and which lays the whole blame on a professional strike organizer, who preaches his message of discontent, and promotes it by the most unscrupulous criminal methods, solely for selfish commercial ends. However reprehensible their tactics may be in some cases, labour leaders, in England at any rate, are not always prompted by purely mercenary motives, nor are they wholly responsible for the tragedies of industrial wars, which, as often as not, are brought about either by the masters or actually by the men themselves. It would have been difficult, however, adequately to represent every point of view in a single picture, and putting argument upon one side, it cannot be denied that this Thanhouser film is a really striking production, which, in addition to its value as a drama, provides food for serious thought.

"As a play, The Strike is a remarkably fine piece of work. In many ways, indeed, it is one of the best films the Thanhouser Company have ever made. It is not merely a sentimental melodrama, lightly skimming the surface of a vast problem. It actually touches the heart of a very vital subject, which is extremely near to the lives of most picture theatre audiences, and its object as a problem picture is not hopelessly spoiled, as is so often the case, by a conventional, foolish, 'happy ending.' The note of realism which runs throughout the plot is ably carried out in the staging and acting. At the very commencement of the film, the right atmosphere is suggested by an impressive panoramic glimpse of a big industrial centre, with its grime and squalor and obscurity, vividly indicating the conditions of life which are dealt with subsequently in the story. There are also several other excellent views, giving a more intimate picture of the factory worker's existence, and all these have an unescapable realism which greatly adds to the force of the production as a whole. The acting, moreover, could scarcely be improved upon, and the greatest praise for these vivid and wholly natural character studies is due to Mr. J. Sparks, as the sinister, bullying strike organizer; to Mr. George Welsh as the grimly determined factory owner, who fiercely refuses to be intimidated even while beholding his business and fortune falling in ruins about him; to Mr. Morgan Jones as the 'old fashioned' workman who alone recognizes the folly into which his comrades are blindly permitting themselves to be led like sheep; and to everyone else in the long cast, including Mr. Morris Foster and Miss Muriel Ostriche.

"There is a good deal more which might be said concerning The Strike, though nothing unfortunately for which we have space here. It is a really fine film, original, impressive, and convincing, and it should certainly be widely seen throughout the theatres. As we have suggested, it is more likely to provoke a great deal of discussion in many places, but his is all to the good, since one cannot but feel grateful for the refreshing novelty of a film drama which relies for its effect upon a basis more solid than mere trifling sentimentality."

 

REVIEW, The Moving Picture World, May 2, 1914:

"This superior two-reel picture illustrates the influence a strike agitator holds over unionism and how he can induce employees to inaugurate a strike against their own interest on trivial matters. This is a strong picture and of much interest to labor organizations. A superior explosion and fire scene is involved in the plot."

 

REVIEW, The New York Dramatic Mirror, April 29, 1914:

"A photoplay dealing with a vital social problem deserves commendation. When it is a drama rather than a preachment, so much the better. Whatever the shortcomings of this production of a depiction of actual facts, it never commits the sin of dullness. It is sensational and melodramatic, and well devised to show the horrors of a strike that brings disaster to all concerned - the capitalist as well as the honest laborer and the agitator. There are exaggerations in the picture, but they are exaggerations based on facts; for the argument that strikes mean an unnecessary waste of life and property is unquestionably sound.

"The error seems to be the placing of labor unions in too unfavorable light, even granting the dangerous character of professional agitators such as Black, the trouble-maker in this story. We are shown the worst elements of organized labor, and none of the better; whereas capital is the virtuous, innocent party, save for persistent obstinancy in refusing to compromise. Black enters the contented village of Peacedale, and by fair means and foul proceeds to unionize the employees at the Trask factory. Price, a young mechanic, falls an easy prey to the organizer; but McLaren, an older man with a level head, stays outside the fold, and, as it happens, McLaren's daughter, Mary, is Price's sweetheart. When an incompetent workman is discharged, a strike is declared, and soon the community of Peacedale is beset by poverty, rather graphically depicted in a number of pathetic scenes.

"Price is on one side, McLaren on the other, as matters go from bad to worse, and Black plans to dynamite the factory. Mary is wounded by a stray bullet, Price is assaulted when he refuses to countenance the destructive methods of the union, and on every hand is misery and despair. Finally the factory is blown up; Trask declares that, rather than rebuild it and continue to deal with unreasonable men, he will retire from business, and the film closes with the unpleasant spectacle of poor people out of work. Staging is satisfactory throughout, and the actors are successful in suggesting the contrasting types found in a factory town. Muriel Ostriche is particularly winning in her portrayal of Mary. Photography is clear."

# # #

 

Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.