The Undercurrent (1919 film)

The Undercurrent

The Undercurrent (1919) - Ad 3
Directed by Wilfrid North
Written by William Addison Lathrop (scenario)
Starring Aurthur Guy Empey
Cinematography John W. Brown
Distributed by Select Pictures
Release date
  • November 16, 1919 (1919-11-16) (United States)
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

The Undercurrent was a 1919 American silent directed by Wilfrid North, produced by Guy Empey, distributed by Select Pictures. It is based on a story by Arthur Guy Empey and though fictional, is considered a sequel to Over the Top which was a 1918 movie loosely based on his autobiographical book of the same name about his own experiences in the British Army in World War I.[1] The New York City premier was held at the Capitol Theatre and was attended by General John J. Pershing who was in New York City for the International Trade Conference of 1919.[2]

Red Scare

Betty Blythe, Frederick Buckley and Guy Empey in a still from The Undercurrent

The Undercurrent is one of several films from around the same period inspired by if not fanning the flames of the Red Scare which followed World War I and the Russian Revolution of 1917. It was released during the Steel strike of 1919[3] which the public had turned against largely due to the Red Scare. Other similarly themed films of the time include Bolshevism on Trial (1919), The Burning Question (1919), The Right to Happiness (1919), The Volcano (1919), The Red Viper (1919),The Great Shadow (1920), The Lifting Shadow (1920), and Dangerous Hours (1920).[4][5]

In the November 14, 1919 issue of Variety, Charlie Chaplin found it necessary to state "I am absolutely cold on the Bolshevism theme; neither am I interested in Socialism" in order to allay fears of where his sympathies lay in regards to the making of Red Scare films.[6]

Empey publicly endorsed deportation for radicals and said "My motto for the Reds is S.O.S. - Ship Or Shot".[7]

Plot

Jack Duncan, a returning World War I veteran joins a group of Bolsheviks. He soon grows disillusioned with the organization and denounces it cause. Mariska, a Russian agent who, upon learning that the authorities are about to arrest her, shoots a fellow provocateur and then turns the weapon on herself.[8]

Cast

References

  1. The Undercurrent at the American Film Institure: Catalog of Feature Films
  2. Pershing views "Undercurrent", Motion Picture News, December 6, 1919, pg 4106
  3. Michael Slade Shull, Radicalism in American Silent Films, 1909-1929: A Filmography and History, (McFarland & Company) 2000, pg 102
  4. Paul Grainge, ed., Memory and Popular Film (Manchester University Press) 2003, pg. 34.
  5. Steven J. Ross, Working-Class Hollywood: Silent Film and the Shaping of Class in America (Princeton University Press) 1999, pg. 139.
  6. Anthony Slide, American Racist: The Life and films of Thomas Dixon (The University Press of Kentucky) 2004, pg. 137.
  7. David Platt, "Celluloid Power: Social Film Criticism from The Birth of a Nation to Judgement at Nuremberg" (Scarecrow Press), 1992, pg. 103
  8. Larry Langman, 'American Film Cycles: The Silent Era', (Greenwood Press) 1998, 310. ISBN 0-313-30657-5
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