Best Films - 1915
by Andre Soares

George Beban was a renowned stage and vaudeville star. Even though he never became a major film name, Beban appeared in nearly 20 films from the mid-1910s to the mid-1920s, almost invariably in the role of an Italian. His first feature film, in fact, was quite succinctly called The Italian. Directed by the respected Reginald Barker (The Aryan, Shadows), the film depicts the plight of an Italian immigrant who arrives in the Land of Plenty only to find poverty, heartbreak, and death (no, not his own).
A not uncommon theme for the socially-conscious 1910s, The Italian is a cinematic American Nightmare that is universes away from the idealized American Dream stories of the Golden Age of the studio system. The reason for that is, perhaps, that U.S. film audiences in the 1910s included millions of immigrants, many of whom could relate to the plight of Beban’s social outcasts. Also surprising is The Italian’s modern feel, from Reginald Barker’s subtle direction to George Beban’s restrained and fully believable portrayal of a man crushed by his dreams.
FILM
Little Pal
DIRECTOR
Reginald Barker (The Italian)
Cecil B. DeMille (Carmen)
James Kirkwood (Little Pal)
ACTOR
George Beban (The Italian)
ACTRESS
Theda Bara (A Fool There Was)
Geraldine Farrar (Carmen)
Lillian Gish (Enoch Arden)
Mary Pickford (Little Pal)
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Clara Williams (The Italian)
SCREENPLAY
Marshall Neilan (Little Pal)
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