Triumph (1917) Poster

(1917)

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5/10
Worth Seeing Because of Chaney, but it's a POTBOILER'S POTBOILER!
mmipyle12 March 2020
Watched what remains of a hot-edged, old-fashioned potboiler if ever there was one, "Triumph", (1917) with Dorothy Phillips, Lon Chaney, Sr., William Stowell, William Dyer, Claire Du Brey, and others. About Phillips' desire to triumph in the theater; she succeeds in getting a good part, rises, then sees the opportunity to reach an acme with a part in a play written by a critic who aspires to see his play performed, but can't find anyone to produce the play. The playwright is Lon Chaney, Sr. Meanwhile, William Dyer, the producer for whom all are working, a corpulent, imperious, and authoritarian overseer, as well as a lecherous snake with his leading ladies, wants to have his way with Phillips if she's to reach her pinnacle of success. He produces the Chaney play for Phillips, but now tries to have his way. When he catches her in an embrace with Chaney he cancels the play just as it's about to open. The embrace, though possibly genuine, was Chaney's attempt to show Phillips how to play a love scene better. Even so, both probably feel a genuine love. It must show, because Dyer's genuine ire burns up the scene as he screams his disenchantment and socks Chaney. It has been made known to the audience through a prior scene that Chaney is a very, very sick man and possibly only has a short time to live. We know this as the next part of the film ensues. Phillips in a fit of pique goes to Dyer's room at the theater, grabs a knife when he says he'll go ahead and let the play proceed if she promises a tad of love...and kills him. Here, the third reel ends and the rest of the film is missing!!!!

We learn through intertitles that Chaney takes the blame. We also learn two other STARTLING facts which would have completed the film... I won't give away the rest. Take it from me, I said this was a potboiler, and I mean it... The film is good for one reason and one reason only - it's a Lon Chaney film. Dorothy Phillips is rote all the way. She doesn't give a bad performance at all. She also is about as inspiring as watching corn grow. Claire Du Brey, on the other hand, the prior leading lady in the troupe, and the one who Dyer had been claiming as his own, gives a sharp, driving, and wonderful performance as a nasty rival to Phillips. She's far more interesting to watch. Chaney himself is always a pleasure to watch, though here he only needed a mustache to twirl a few times to seem a few iota over the top. Luckily, he doesn't have a mustache. Still, that face of his could speak volumes when he acted. Dyer gives a well modulated performance as the lecherous producer. William Stowell as a leading man in the company and secondary lead is fine, if not written into the plot very well.

Well worth the watch. Too bad it's truncated. The nitrate deterioration beginning with reel 2 is also pretty bad, though it doesn't interfere with the presentation. From Grapevine Video. If you're a Chaney completest as I am, you'll want to seek this one out.
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6/10
The Price
boblipton21 October 2017
That TRIUMPH exists in any form is a testament to the enduring interest in its second-billed player, Lon Chaney. It's the melodramatic story of Dorothy Phillips, who longs to be an actress on the legitimate stage. She gains a foothold in Dudley Weyman's company, and soon falls in love with Chaney, a sickly, but aspiring playwright. She convinces Weyman to produce Chaney's play so she can have her triumph, but when Weyman catches them rehearsing a romantic clinch for the show, he stops the production and tells her he will only let the premiere proceed if she will submit to his embraces,

Boo! Hiss! The movie was originally five reels, but the final two reels are missing. Those that survive appear to be standard-issue material from Universal in this period, when it was the busiest studio in the world, and truly a movie factory, turning out five-reel melodramas on a tight budget and schedule. Miss Phillips' performance seems rote, if competent. Mr. Chaney's seems to be a precursor to many of the roles he would play in the late 1920s for MGM; although here he is young enough for the leading lady to fall in love with, he is too ill to be sexually threatening to anyone except the other actors, particularly the pudgy and rapacious Mr. Weyman. It's a movie that fans of Mr. Chaney will want to see, yet, having seen it, will not be honestly feel it adds anything important to the corpus of his work.
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3/10
Rare and Bad
Maliejandra30 May 2014
Triumph is the story of a woman who wants to become a famous actress. She begins doing local work in parks, but one day gets a break to perform on the stage. She is the new flavor of the week, and a fellow actress recommends that she string along the producer without ever actually giving in to his whims to maintain her status as the number one girl. This backfires when he finds out about her amorous relationship with a struggling writer (Lon Chaney) and her dreams lie on shaky ground.

Very little of this film exists, which could contribute to why it is so hard to watch, but it could also be a blessing in disguise. Better melodramatic tripe like this to be lost than a masterpiece like The Unknown or The Penalty.

I saw what is left of this film screened at Cinevent in 2014 and while I am always glad to see rare films, this one isn't worth reviving.
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