8/10
Outstanding early courtroom drama released in silent and sound versions
26 February 2021
1928 and 1929 were pivotal years in the conversion from silent film to sound film. Many films were made with both silent and sound versions, and in many instances they differed because of the technique inherent in each kind of film. However - there were a few where they were made with sound, but because some theaters weren't wired yet for sound, some intertitles were placed at strategic locations to identify what was going on, and even some dialogue in the intertitles was used, exactly as it had been in silent pictures - if it was fitting. Last night I viewed such a film. My print of "Thru Different Eyes" (1929) has no sound of any sort, including any accompanying music score. Totally silent. When it began I was surprised because I bought the DVD thinking it was the sound Mono (MovieTone) version. Instead, it was the silent version, and a strange thing it is, too. I bought the film because it's the debut of Sylvia Sidney, but also because it stars one of my favorite movie stars, Edmund Lowe. The lead actress and first name in the cast is Mary Duncan. The man who is the cause of this court brouhaha is Warner Baxter, fresh off his Best Actor Academy Award for "In Old Arizona", an early and rather creaky '28 sound film.

The film begins in a courtroom with Selmer Jackson defending Lowe in a case where Lowe has been accused of murdering Baxter. Jackson pleads the case as he knows it from his defendant. When he's finished (having seen the case pleaded through the action in flashback) we've witnessed a case where Lowe is innocent. Jackson begs the jury to exonerate his client. Then the prosecution pleads its case. We witness (all through flashback again) a completely different argument. Let me repeat. A completely different argument. While we witness the two different ways the case was supposedly done, we get periodic scenes back in the courtroom of Lowe's wife, played by Duncan, simply sitting stolidly, mute, without any kind of facial expression. She's been shown to have fallen out of love with Lowe and in love with Baxter during the proceedings so far. When the jury declares Lowe guilty after the cases have been given, suddenly one of the spectators in the court whom we've seen shown on camera four or five times - Sylvia Sidney - rushes up to the judge and pleads HER version...

This was really a wonderful drama. Lasting only 62 minutes, I only wish I could have heard the sound version. Those who've seen it compliment Sidney on her acting. She's good silent, but she must have been spectacular with sound! I really recommend this show, but hopefully anyone who sees it will see the sound version and not this really lessened silent version.

Others in the show are Natalie Moorhead (with her blonde helmet of bobbed hair), Earle Foxe, Florence Lake, Purnell Pratt, and many other character actors of the period, including Nigel de Brulier, Stepin Fetchit, and DeWitt Jennings.
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