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The Ghosts of Yesterday (1918) watch online HD

The Ghosts of Yesterday (1918) watch online HD
  • Original title:The Ghosts of Yesterday
  • Category:Movie / Drama / Romance
  • Released:1918
  • Director:Charles Miller
  • Actors:Norma Talmadge,Eugene O'Brien,Stuart Holmes
  • Writer:Mildred Considine,Rupert Hughes
  • Duration:1h 12min
  • Video type:Movie

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Short summary

An impoverished artist uses his own wife as a model, but before e can complete the painting, she dies of malnutrition. The portrait remains unfinished until he comes across another woman who bears a striking resemblance to his dead wife. He asks her to help him finish the picture and she falls in love, but is jealous of the love he still feels for her. After she leaves him, she learns that he has gone blind.

Four out of six reels of this film survive. The last two reels are missing in their entirety, but some fragments of reel six survive. All of this material exists in the Library of Congress, Washington D.C.

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    • Author: Carrot
    Review from Moving Picture World, January 19, 1918 - "Ghosts of Yesterday"

    Norma Talmadge Gives Superior Interpretation of Dual Role in Engrossing Photoplay Made from Stage Drama by Rupert Hughes--On Select Program

    A stage drama written by Rupert Hughes for Mrs. Leslie Carter and called "Two Women" has been made into a photoplay by Mildred Consadine and produced by Joseph M. Schenck under the title of "Ghosts of Yesterday," with Norma Talmadge in the dual role of Ruth Grahame and Jeanne La Fleur. The screen version is in six parts, was directed by Charles Miller, and is on the Select Pictures program. The work may be best described as a modern "Camille."

    Certain persons will find fault with the moral character of the heroine, and also condemn the hero for permitting a woman of doubtful character to take the place in his heart once occupied by his dead wife; but the dramatic value of the Hughes story cannot be denied. Those who sympathize with the highly wrought atmosphere of the Dumas play and regard the loves of Armand and his "lady with a past" as romance of the first rank, will find "Ghosts of Yesterday" greatly to their liking. They will be largely influenced in their decision by the lucid and engrossing telling of the drama, and the adroit manner of its presentation by Norma Talmadge, her supporting company, and Director Miller.

    New York City is the locale of the opening scenes of the play. Howard Marston, who has thrown away a fortune in riotous living, is prevented from committing suicide by Ruth Grahame, a girl in humble circumstances. Marston learns to love his good angel and makes her his wife. He has studied painting, and manages to earn a modest living as an artist in a commercial establishment. Ruth, always frail, falls ill while her husband is painting her portrait, and dies just as Marston learns that an invention of his has again made him rich. The death of his wife leaves him inconsolable, and he goes to Paris to live. Marston is still in a morbid state of mind when he is taken to a cabaret by a friend and meets Jeanne LaFleur, its principal singer.

    Jeanne is the typical woman of her class, unmoral and avaricious, but bears a remarkable likeness to Marston's dead wife. The man is beset with a strong desire to use Jeanne as his model and complete the portrait of Ruth. He persuades the French girl to agree, and has her become a member of his household while the work is being performed. The expected happens--the two fall in love with each other. Realizing his disloyalty to Ruth's memory, Marston tells Jeanne that he loves her only for her resemblance to his wife. In a fit of rage Jeanne picks up a knife and slashes the portrait to ribbons. She then returns to her old haunts and tries to forget Marston.

    Hearing that the girl is at the home of Count Pascal, an old protector, the American, who finds that he loves Jeanne for herself alone, hurries to the place and saves her from the ardent Frenchman. During a struggle in the dark between the two men, Marston is slashed across the face by the Count, and loses his eyesight. Jeanne helps to nurse the stricken man. When she finds out that he may always be blind and that he loves her for herself she is overjoyed at the thought of becoming his companion for life. All of this is set forth on screen, with intimate views of "the gay life" of Paris and correct reproductions of the several grades of existence touched on in the photoplay.

    In the dual role of Ruth and Jeanne the star is given an interesting opportunity to show her versatility, and gratifies her admirers by making the most of every phase of character presented by the two women. As Ruth she has the requisite sweetness and simplicity, and as Jeanne her impersonation of a woman of the Parisian underworld is illumined by all the exaggerated charm, tricks of manner, and want of right feeling that belong to the cabaret singing woman type. Her differentiation of the moral nature of the two women is always clear and convincing. Norma Talmadge has never appeared to better advantage in any drama intended for the screen.

    Eugene O'Brien as Marston could hardly be improved upon. He succeeds in throwing just the air of romantic ardor about the character that would come nearest to excusing Marston's infatuation for Jeanne. Stuart Holmes is the embodiment of a cynical, well bred, and dissolute Frenchman, and John Daly Murphy is equally lifelike as an aged roue. Henry J. Hebert as Roger Sterns, Ida Darling as Mrs. Whitaker, and Blanche Douglas as Marie Calleaux are valuable members of the cast. The extras used in the cabaret scenes have been selected with excellent judgement.
  • Cast overview:
    Norma Talmadge Norma Talmadge - Ruth Graham / Jeanne La Fleur
    Eugene O'Brien Eugene O'Brien - Howard Marston
    Stuart Holmes Stuart Holmes - Count Pascal de Fondras
    John Daly Murphy John Daly Murphy - Duc de Lissac
    Henry Hebert Henry Hebert - Roger Stearns (as Henry J. Hebert)
    Ida Darling Ida Darling - Mrs. Whitaker
    Blanche Douglas Blanche Douglas - Marie Calleaux
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