Camille is a 1921 American silent drama film starring Alla Nazimova as Marguerite and Rudolph Valentino as her lover, Armand. It is based on the play adaptation La Dame aux Camélias (The Lady of the Camellias) by Alexandre Dumas, fils, which was first published in French as a novel in 1848 and as a play in 1852. Camille is one of numerous screen adaptations of Dumas, fils' story.[1][2] The film is set in 1920s Paris, whereas the original version takes place in Paris in the 1840s. It has lavish Art Deco sets; Rudolph Valentino later married the film's art director, Natacha Rambova.

Camille
Newspaper ad from March 1922 in the Coconino Sun (Flagstaff, Arizona) in the Library of Congress
Directed byRay C. Smallwood
Screenplay byJune Mathis (scenario)
Based onLa Dame aux Camélias
1848 novel
by Alexandre Dumas, fils
Produced byAlla Nazimova
StarringAlla Nazimova
Rudolph Valentino
Rex Cherryman
Arthur Hoyt
Patsy Ruth Miller
CinematographyRudolph J. Bergquist
Production
company
Nazimova Productions
Distributed byMetro Pictures Corporation
Release date
  • September 26, 1921 (1921-09-26)
Running time
70 minutes (contemporary edit)
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
Camille

Plot

edit

Young law student Armand (Rudolph Valentino) is smitten when he sees Marguerite (Alla Nazimova), a courtesan, at the opera. Marguerite is constantly surrounded by suitors, whom she entertains at her lavish apartment. Later, Armand pursues her when he attends one of her private parties. She rejects his advances at first, but eventually returns his affection. Secretly, she has consumption and is frequently beset by bouts of illness.

The two live happily together until Armand's father, seeking to protect his family's reputation, convinces Marguerite to end the relationship. She finally relents and runs away to a wealthy client, leaving a note for Armand.

When Armand finds the note he is shattered. The sorrow eventually turns to rage, and he decides to plunge into Parisian nightlife, associating himself with Olympe, another courtesan. When he sees Marguerite at a casino, he publicly denounces her.

Marguerite gives up her life as a courtesan and quickly finds herself in massive debt. Her illness also takes a heavy toll. Eventually, as she lies dying in bed, her furniture and belongings are repossessed around her. She persuades the men taking her belongings to allow her to keep her most precious possession: a book – Manon Lescaut – Armand had given to her.

Marguerite dies lying in bed in her apartment holding the book Armand gave her, wishing to sleep where she is happy dreaming about Armand. Marguerite's maid Nanine, and her newlywed friends Gaston and Nichette are at her bedside as she dies. Unlike the original novel, the film does not depict Armand and Marguerite ever seeing each other again after the casino scene and offers no suggestion that Armand ever learned of Marguerite's sacrifice and true feelings for him.

Cast

edit
 
Alla Nazimova and Rudolph Valentino depicted in a lobby card for the film.

Reception

edit

Picture-Play Magazine wrote of the film in their August 1921 issue: "The Camille and Armand of tradition are forgotten in the potent lure of the modern characterization of Nazimova and Rudolph Valentino. Bizarre, ephemeral, at moments, and at others, frenzied, their version promises a haunting succession of mesmeric pictures. It does not aim to present the Camille that successive generations have applauded and sniffled over. Because it is Nazimova's presentation of a story that has survived even the buffetings of endless productions—good, bad, and indifferent—it promises to be interesting."[3]

Preservation

edit

The film has survived and is available to the public on DVD by various film distributors and independent dealers. It is presented as a bonus on the DVD copy of the 1936 version Camille with Greta Garbo.

References

edit
  1. ^ AFI (n.d.), "Camille", The AFI Catalog of Feature Films, American Film Institute, retrieved July 29, 2016
  2. ^ silentera.com (March 8, 2011), "Progressive Silent Film List: Camille (1921)", SilentEra.com, retrieved July 29, 2016
  3. ^ "Camille". Picture-Play Magazine. 14: 76. August 1921. Retrieved August 18, 2015.
edit