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The Hearts of Age

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Genre
  
Short

Producer
  
William Vance

Writer
  
Orson Welles

Language
  
Silent film

5.8/10
IMDb

Screenplay
  
Orson Welles

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

The Hearts of Age movie poster

Director
  
Orson Welles William Vance

Release date
  
1934 (1934)

Directors
  
Orson Welles, William Vance

Cast
  
Orson Welles, Virginia Nicolson, William Vance, Paul Edgerton

Similar movies
  
Related Orson Welles movies

The hearts of age 1934 short is orson welles first film


The Hearts of Age is an early film made by Orson Welles. The film is an eight-minute short that he co-directed with friend William Vance in 1934. The film stars Welles's first wife, Virginia Nicolson, and Welles himself. He made the film while still attending the Todd School for Boys in Woodstock, Illinois, at the age of 19.

Contents

The Hearts of Age movie scenes

The hearts of age


Plot

The Hearts of Age httpsiytimgcomvipXKIMag5hHEhqdefaultjpg

An elderly woman sits on a bell as it rocks back and forth, while a servant in blackface pulls at a rope. A dandified gentleman appears at the top of a stairway and doffs his hat to the lady; he smiles and courts her attention. She does not respond, but the servant hangs himself. The scene changes to an darkened interior: the gentleman sits at a grand piano and plays, but something is wrong. He opens the piano's lid and finds the woman lying inside, dead. He leafs through a number of tombstone-shaped cards with different inscriptions - "Sleeping", "At Rest", "With The Lord" - and finally chooses one that says "The End".

The film's action, such as it is, is intercut with random shots of bells, headstones, a church cross and other images, sometimes printed in negative. Many years later Welles acknowledged that the film was an imitation of the early surrealist films of Luis Bunuel and Jean Cocteau. He did not consider it a serious piece of work, and was amused at the idea of being added to his creative canon.

Cast

  • Orson Welles as Death
  • Virginia Nicolson as the Old Woman/Keystone Kop
  • William Vance as the Indian in blanket
  • Edgerton Paul as the Bell-ringer in blackface
  • Blackie O'Neal
  • Background

    Many point to The Hearts of Age as an important precursor to Welles's first Hollywood film, Citizen Kane. Welles and Vance were college friends. The latter's only other film on record is another student short – an adaptation of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in 1932.

    Cast member Charles "Blackie" O'Neal became a screenwriter (The Seventh Victim) and the father of actor Ryan O'Neal.

    Home media

    The Hearts of Age is a home movie and no copyright was ever filed. The film is in the public domain. The once-rare film is easily seen today thanks to DVD extras and sites such as YouTube.

    The film was released by Kino on the first DVD in its Avant Garde series, Avant-Garde: Experimental Cinema of the 1920s and '30s (August 2, 2005, UPC 738329040222). The DVD was produced from the film holdings of the Raymond Rohauer Collection by Bret Wood.

    References

    The Hearts of Age Wikipedia
    The Hearts of Age IMDb The Hearts of Age themoviedb.org