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7th Heaven (1927)

Posted By: Someonelse
SD / DVD IMDb
7th Heaven (1927)

7th Heaven (1927)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 4:3 | 01:58:36 | 4,23 Gb
Audio: Score AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps + Commentary track
English intertitles with Español and Français subtitles
Genre: Drama, Romance

Director: Frank Borzage
Stars: Janet Gaynor, Charles Farrell, Ben Bard

On the eve of World War One - Two strangers will meet and discover more than they bargained for in the academy award winning 1927 classic 7th heaven. Chico (Charles Farrell) is a bold and brash sewer worker in Paris who comes to the rescue of the down and out Diane (Janet Gaynor). In a city full of loneliness and uncertainty Chico and Diane find a closeness they've never had before. There relationship is put to the test when Paris is bombed and Chico marches off to war. Directed by former actor Frank Borzage this is the first cinematic pairing for Farrell and Gaynor. There popularity at the time was so great that the two of them went on to do ten more films together concluding with the 1929 revue Happy Days.


“For those who will climb it, there is a ladder leading from the depths to the heights – from the sewer to the stars – the ladder of courage.”

This is how legendary Hollywood director Frank Borzage introduces his beautiful silent romantic drama, 7th Heaven, set in Paris on the eve of the First World War, and based on Austin Strong’s smash hit Broadway play of the same name.

7th Heaven (1927)

It tells the emotive and inspirational tale of an unlikely romance between two social outcasts – Chico (Charles Farrell), a lowly sewage worker whose greatest ambition in life is to be elevated to the level of street-washer, and Diane (Janet Gaynor), a poor street waif who is relentlessly bullied and beaten by her cruel sister, Nana (Gladys Brockwell) – and how their union enables them to climb this ladder of courage together, to reach beyond their humble origins.

7th Heaven (1927)

As a modern audience let us be in no doubt from the outset that Borzage is unashamedly sentimental in his treatment of this subject matter, in a way which some viewers, raised in a post-modern society where the currencies of irony and sarcasm hold sway, may find hard to identify with. Thus it is that Chico and Diane are brought together by fate, a chance meeting which occurs when Diane is driven out of her apartment by her spiteful, malicious sister, who then chokes her, almost to the point of death, out in the street, right above Chico’s sewer. Unable to stand and watch this vicious beating, Chico rescues Diane from the clutches of her sister, but, almost afraid to acknowledge his own heroism, Chico initially pretends to be almost as callous towards Diane as her sister was sadistic.

7th Heaven (1927)

Chico is indeed a man struggling against his own impulse to do good. The perfect example is the touching early scene in which Chico prevents Diane – wretched, helpless, desperate – from committing suicide, wrenching the knife from her, just at the moment she is about to plunge it into her heart. In spite of his heroic act, Chico refuses to play the hero, pretending that he only saved her because she had the audacity to try to kill herself with his knife! Nevertheless, he again comes to her rescue, pretending that she is his wife, and taking her into his own home, in order to prevent her being taken away by the police for vagrancy.

7th Heaven (1927)

It is here, in the 7th floor apartment which Chico calls home (the 7th Heaven of the title), that the film’s central romance unfolds, as the two outcasts begin to fall in love, despite both initially being ignorant of their mutual affection. Their ‘first night’ together in the apartment is a beautifully observed, touching, and affecting sequence, innocent to the point of naivety, but nevertheless enough to bring a smile to the face of the even most hardened cynic. From this moment on, their mutual bond grows stronger by the day, in a beautiful portrait of blossoming romance, which is cruelly shattered by the outbreak of war. The final third of the film cuts between Chico’s experience on the front, and Diane’s life, working in a munitions factory back at home, emphasising the spiritual bond which remains between the lovers, even as they remain divided by the horrors of war.

7th Heaven (1927)

To a modern audience some of the religious sentimentalism of the film may seem too overt, lacking in either subtlety or irony; but we should always be careful not to judge such things by the standards of our own era. In any case, for all its sentimentalism, the film does include one of my all time favourite lines on religion, spoken by Chico after he talks about his fruitless attempts to curry favour with the Almighty, by making donations at church: “That’s why I’m an atheist – God owes me ten dollars”. Amen to that.

7th Heaven (1927)

There are also times when the silent film’s dialogue is truly terrible, but these remnants of a bygone era, much like the tendency towards excessively theatrical acting, although they may produce an unintended smile from a modern viewer, are also, undeniably, a part of the film’s charm and the innocence which gives the film its sincerity.

7th Heaven (1927)

7th Heaven may lack some of the aesthetic and stylistic experimentalism of Borzage’s contemporary, F W Murnau – of Nosferatu fame (whose magnificent Sunrise was released in the same year as 7th Heaven) – but there is still some truly striking cinematography, not least the fabulous single take in which the camera - mounted on an elevator scaffold - follows Chico and Diane in their ascent towards Chico’s 7th floor apartment for the first time.

7th Heaven (1927)

This is an elegant, inspiring piece of silent cinema, which is strongly recommended for any hopeless romantics out there, and for any fans of the silent era. After all, it won three academy awards at the inaugural Oscars ceremony, so they must have been doing something right.
7th Heaven (1927)

Special Features:
- Audio Commentary by film historians Robert Birchard and Anthony Slide
- 7th Heaven screenplay
- Soundtrack notes
- Still Gallery
All Credits goes to Original uploader.