Greed


1h 52m 1925
Greed

Brief Synopsis

In this silent film, lust for gold tears apart a dentist and his wife.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Adaptation
Classic Hollywood
Drama
Release Date
Jan 26, 1925
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Death Valley, California, USA; Polk Street, San Francisco, California, USA
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel McTeague by Frank Norris (New York, 1899).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 52m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Film Length
10,067ft (10 reels)

Synopsis

McTeague, a San Francisco dentist, marries Trina, a thrifty woman who has won $5,000 in a lottery. She banks this money and, by scrimping and saving, hoards most of the money her husband makes. Marcus Schouler, Trina's frustrated former suitor, discovers that McTeague does not have a license to practice dentistry and causes him to lose his business. McTeague can make only a poor living as a laborer, and he and Trina eventually drift to squalid quarters. Trina hoards money compulsively, and McTeague, crazed with the knowledge of the money, kills her and escapes with the gold, fleeing into Death Valley. Marcus goes after him, and the men fight. McTeague kills Marcus but finds himself handcuffed to the dead man. Unable to find the key to free himself, McTeague dies of thirst.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Adaptation
Classic Hollywood
Drama
Release Date
Jan 26, 1925
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Death Valley, California, USA; Polk Street, San Francisco, California, USA
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel McTeague by Frank Norris (New York, 1899).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 52m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Film Length
10,067ft (10 reels)

Articles

Greed


McTeague, son of degenerate parents from a California mining town, is torn between a propensity for violence and more gentle impulses. When a traveling dentist visits the town, McTeague is inspired to take up a career in dentistry and leaves his native mining town to set up practice in San Francisco. When his best friend Marcus refers his current romantic interest, Trina Sieppe, to him to have a broken tooth repaired, McTeague finds himself powerfully attracted to her and struggles against the impulse to molest her while she lies unconscious in the dental chair. He confesses his feelings to Marcus, who agrees to step aside and allow McTeague to woo Trina; eventually the two get married. After Trina wins a lottery, she is transformed into a pathological miser and resentment flares up between McTeague and Marcus. McTeague's violent tendencies seize control of him once again and he murders his wife. Marcus, determined to bring him to justice, becomes a sheriff's deputy and pursues McTeague toward a fatal confrontation under the pitiless sun of Death Valley.

The novel McTeague (1899) by Frank Norris (1870-1902) is a key work in the Naturalist movement of American literature. Drawing upon popular conceptions of the evolutionary theories of Darwin and the work of contemporary French writers such as Emile Zola, Norris creates in McTeague a man whose fate is determined by genes, environment and sheer chance, someone who tragically proves unable to control his baser instincts. Erich von Stroheim, the producer and director of Greed, first encountered Norris's novel in the early 1910s and expressed plans to make it into a film as early as 1920. The novel had been adapted previously in a five-reel version entitled Life's Whirlpool (1917), directed by Barry O'Neil and starring Fania Marinoff and Holbrook Blinn; this film no longer survives. Stroheim said of Greed (1924) (quoted by Kevin Brownlow in the book Hollywood: The Pioneers): "I was not going to compromise. I felt that after the last war, the motion picture-going public had tired of the cinematic 'chocolate eclairs' which had been stuffed down their throat. I felt they were ready for a large dose of plebian but honest 'corned beef and cabbage.' I felt they had become weary of insipid pollyanna stories, with their doll-like heroines steeped in eternal virginity, and their hairless, flat-chested sterile heroes who were as lily-white as the heroines. I had graduated from the D. W. Griffith school of film-making and intended to go the Master one better as regards film realism. I knew that everything could be done with film, the only medium which could reproduce life as it really was."

The production and eventual mutilation of Greed is one of the more complicated episodes in Hollywood history. Stroheim's first feature, Blind Husbands (1919), made a fortune for Universal, but his second film, The Devil's Passkey (1920), which no longer survives, ran afoul of the studio. His third feature, Foolish Wives (1922), with its minutely detailed reconstruction of Monte Carlo, ran up exorbitant production costs and was cut at studio executive Irving Thalberg's insistence from 34 to 10 reels. His next film, Merry-Go-Round (1923), was taken out of his hands and partly shot by Rupert Julian. After this experience, Stroheim left Universal and joined with Goldwyn to make McTeague, which he later retitled Greed. The film was shot between the spring and fall of 1923, much of it on location in the Sierra Nevada mountains, San Francisco and most famously, the punishing summer heat of Death Valley. In a cruel irony reminiscent of one of Stroheim's own plots, Goldwyn's merger with Metro and Mayer brought Stroheim again under the control of Irving Thalberg after he had finished the film, placing his most cherished project to date in jeopardy.

Harry Carr, one of the lucky few who saw the first rough cut of the film, wrote, "I saw a wonderful picture the other day that no one else will ever see. It was the unslaughtered version of Greed. It was a magnificent piece of work, but it was forty-two reels long. We went into the projecting-room at 10:30 in the morning; we staggered out at 8:00 that night. I can't imagine what they are going to do with it. It is like Les Miserables. Episodes come along that you think have no bearing on the story, then twelve or fourteen reels later, it hits you with a crash. For stark, terrible realism and marvelous artistry, it is the greatest picture I have seen. But I don't know what it will be like when it shrinks from forty-two to eight reels." The film went through various cuts, from somewhere between twenty-two to twenty-eight reels down to a version prepared by Stroheim's friend Rex Ingram and Ingram's editor Grant Whytock that ran between fifteen and eighteen reels and was designed to be shown in two parts. However, the studio intervened, cutting the film down to the ten-reel version in which the film survives to the present day. The excised footage was allegedly destroyed by the studio. As critic Jonathan Rosenbaum rightly points out in his recent book on Greed (part of the BFI FilmClassics series), it is difficult to determine what Stroheim considered to be the definitive version of the film at the time, although much later he referred to the forty-two reel version. At the same time, even in its mutilated form the surviving ten-reel version plays remarkably well today; many still consider it among the greatest of all silent films.

Rick Schmidlin, who oversaw the acclaimed reconstruction of Orson Welles' Touch of Evil (1958), carefully following Welles' own detailed memo to studio executives, undertook an entirely different kind of project here; since none of the excised footage has survived, he used more than 650 stills and the continuity script to fill in the gaps in the narrative. Entire subplots, such as the relationship between the junkman Zerkow and the gypsy Maria, have been restored in the four-hour version. Through optical pans, cutting and iris effects, Schmidlin gives the still images a more film-like presentation and tries to suggest how the scenes might have been constructed in the longer versions. Early prints of the film used the Handschlegel process, a stencil coloring system, to give a yellow tint to gold objects, most notably the giant gold tooth; Schmidlin reproduces the original effect in this version. While Schmidlin's project does not pretend to create anything like a definitive version, it gives us a fuller sense of the subtleties and complex parallels of Stroheim's grand vision. At the time of the reconstruction's premiere on TCM in 1999, Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote: "If you have any interest in Greed, you can't afford to miss this version."

Producer and Director: Erich von Stroheim.
Screenplay: Erich von Stroheim and June Mathis (titles), based on the novel McTeague by Frank Norris.
Cinematography: William Daniels, Ben Reynolds, Ernest B. Schoedsack.
Art Direction: Cedric Gibbons.
Editor: Joseph Farnham (credited).
Reconstruction: Rick Schmidlin.
Music: Robert Israel.
Cast: Gibson Gowland (McTeague), ZaSu Pitts (Trina), Jean Hersholt (Marcus Schouler), Chester Conklin (Mr. Sieppe), Sylvia Ashton (Mrs. Sieppe), Dale Fuller (Maria), Joan Standing (Selina), Austin Jewel (August Sieppe), Oscar and Otto Gottell (the Sieppe Twins), Frank Hayes (Old Grannis), Fanny Midgley (Miss Baker), Hughie Mack (Mr. Heise), Jack Curtis (McTeague's father), Tempe Pigott (McTeague's mother).
C & BW-240m.

by James Steffen
Greed

Greed

McTeague, son of degenerate parents from a California mining town, is torn between a propensity for violence and more gentle impulses. When a traveling dentist visits the town, McTeague is inspired to take up a career in dentistry and leaves his native mining town to set up practice in San Francisco. When his best friend Marcus refers his current romantic interest, Trina Sieppe, to him to have a broken tooth repaired, McTeague finds himself powerfully attracted to her and struggles against the impulse to molest her while she lies unconscious in the dental chair. He confesses his feelings to Marcus, who agrees to step aside and allow McTeague to woo Trina; eventually the two get married. After Trina wins a lottery, she is transformed into a pathological miser and resentment flares up between McTeague and Marcus. McTeague's violent tendencies seize control of him once again and he murders his wife. Marcus, determined to bring him to justice, becomes a sheriff's deputy and pursues McTeague toward a fatal confrontation under the pitiless sun of Death Valley. The novel McTeague (1899) by Frank Norris (1870-1902) is a key work in the Naturalist movement of American literature. Drawing upon popular conceptions of the evolutionary theories of Darwin and the work of contemporary French writers such as Emile Zola, Norris creates in McTeague a man whose fate is determined by genes, environment and sheer chance, someone who tragically proves unable to control his baser instincts. Erich von Stroheim, the producer and director of Greed, first encountered Norris's novel in the early 1910s and expressed plans to make it into a film as early as 1920. The novel had been adapted previously in a five-reel version entitled Life's Whirlpool (1917), directed by Barry O'Neil and starring Fania Marinoff and Holbrook Blinn; this film no longer survives. Stroheim said of Greed (1924) (quoted by Kevin Brownlow in the book Hollywood: The Pioneers): "I was not going to compromise. I felt that after the last war, the motion picture-going public had tired of the cinematic 'chocolate eclairs' which had been stuffed down their throat. I felt they were ready for a large dose of plebian but honest 'corned beef and cabbage.' I felt they had become weary of insipid pollyanna stories, with their doll-like heroines steeped in eternal virginity, and their hairless, flat-chested sterile heroes who were as lily-white as the heroines. I had graduated from the D. W. Griffith school of film-making and intended to go the Master one better as regards film realism. I knew that everything could be done with film, the only medium which could reproduce life as it really was." The production and eventual mutilation of Greed is one of the more complicated episodes in Hollywood history. Stroheim's first feature, Blind Husbands (1919), made a fortune for Universal, but his second film, The Devil's Passkey (1920), which no longer survives, ran afoul of the studio. His third feature, Foolish Wives (1922), with its minutely detailed reconstruction of Monte Carlo, ran up exorbitant production costs and was cut at studio executive Irving Thalberg's insistence from 34 to 10 reels. His next film, Merry-Go-Round (1923), was taken out of his hands and partly shot by Rupert Julian. After this experience, Stroheim left Universal and joined with Goldwyn to make McTeague, which he later retitled Greed. The film was shot between the spring and fall of 1923, much of it on location in the Sierra Nevada mountains, San Francisco and most famously, the punishing summer heat of Death Valley. In a cruel irony reminiscent of one of Stroheim's own plots, Goldwyn's merger with Metro and Mayer brought Stroheim again under the control of Irving Thalberg after he had finished the film, placing his most cherished project to date in jeopardy. Harry Carr, one of the lucky few who saw the first rough cut of the film, wrote, "I saw a wonderful picture the other day that no one else will ever see. It was the unslaughtered version of Greed. It was a magnificent piece of work, but it was forty-two reels long. We went into the projecting-room at 10:30 in the morning; we staggered out at 8:00 that night. I can't imagine what they are going to do with it. It is like Les Miserables. Episodes come along that you think have no bearing on the story, then twelve or fourteen reels later, it hits you with a crash. For stark, terrible realism and marvelous artistry, it is the greatest picture I have seen. But I don't know what it will be like when it shrinks from forty-two to eight reels." The film went through various cuts, from somewhere between twenty-two to twenty-eight reels down to a version prepared by Stroheim's friend Rex Ingram and Ingram's editor Grant Whytock that ran between fifteen and eighteen reels and was designed to be shown in two parts. However, the studio intervened, cutting the film down to the ten-reel version in which the film survives to the present day. The excised footage was allegedly destroyed by the studio. As critic Jonathan Rosenbaum rightly points out in his recent book on Greed (part of the BFI FilmClassics series), it is difficult to determine what Stroheim considered to be the definitive version of the film at the time, although much later he referred to the forty-two reel version. At the same time, even in its mutilated form the surviving ten-reel version plays remarkably well today; many still consider it among the greatest of all silent films. Rick Schmidlin, who oversaw the acclaimed reconstruction of Orson Welles' Touch of Evil (1958), carefully following Welles' own detailed memo to studio executives, undertook an entirely different kind of project here; since none of the excised footage has survived, he used more than 650 stills and the continuity script to fill in the gaps in the narrative. Entire subplots, such as the relationship between the junkman Zerkow and the gypsy Maria, have been restored in the four-hour version. Through optical pans, cutting and iris effects, Schmidlin gives the still images a more film-like presentation and tries to suggest how the scenes might have been constructed in the longer versions. Early prints of the film used the Handschlegel process, a stencil coloring system, to give a yellow tint to gold objects, most notably the giant gold tooth; Schmidlin reproduces the original effect in this version. While Schmidlin's project does not pretend to create anything like a definitive version, it gives us a fuller sense of the subtleties and complex parallels of Stroheim's grand vision. At the time of the reconstruction's premiere on TCM in 1999, Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote: "If you have any interest in Greed, you can't afford to miss this version." Producer and Director: Erich von Stroheim. Screenplay: Erich von Stroheim and June Mathis (titles), based on the novel McTeague by Frank Norris. Cinematography: William Daniels, Ben Reynolds, Ernest B. Schoedsack. Art Direction: Cedric Gibbons. Editor: Joseph Farnham (credited). Reconstruction: Rick Schmidlin. Music: Robert Israel. Cast: Gibson Gowland (McTeague), ZaSu Pitts (Trina), Jean Hersholt (Marcus Schouler), Chester Conklin (Mr. Sieppe), Sylvia Ashton (Mrs. Sieppe), Dale Fuller (Maria), Joan Standing (Selina), Austin Jewel (August Sieppe), Oscar and Otto Gottell (the Sieppe Twins), Frank Hayes (Old Grannis), Fanny Midgley (Miss Baker), Hughie Mack (Mr. Heise), Jack Curtis (McTeague's father), Tempe Pigott (McTeague's mother). C & BW-240m. by James Steffen

Quotes

I never truckled; I never took off the hat to Fashion and held it out for pennies. By God, I told them the truth. They liked it or they didn't like it. What had that to do with me? I told them the truth; I knew it for the truth then, and I know it for the truth now. FRANK NORRIS.
- Title card
GOLD - GOLD - GOLD - GOLD. Bright and Yellow, Hard and Cold, Molten, Graven, Hammered, Rolled, Hard to Get and Light to Hold; Stolen, Borrowed, Squandered - Doled.
- Title card
There's no water... within a hundred miles o' here!
- Marcus
We... are... dead... men!
- Marcus
Let's go over and sit in the sewer.
- Trina

Trivia

The original version was 42 reels, and ran for 8 hours. This version is presumed lost. Please check your attic.

Sources have claimed Ernest B. Schoedsack was also a cinematographer, but he denies it, saying he was in the Amazon filming Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life (1925) during that time.

Originally produced with a running time of 9 hours. It was only shown once at this length, at a private studio screening.

Jean Hersholt was hospitalized after he lost 27 pounds during the filming of the movie's climax in Death Valley.

Concerning the editor hired to cut "Greed" down to 2 hours, Erich von Stroheim supposedly commented: "The only thing he had on his mind was his hat!"

as a balloon vendor (although only in a deleted sequence). McTeague and Marcus are in the boardwalk restaurant, and outside, through the window, you can just barely see a man in the background holding up balloons - this is von Stroheim.

Notes

Erich von Stroheim reduced his initial 42-reel film to 24 reels and then refused to further touch the film, asking his friend, Rex Ingram, to work on it. Ingram further cut the film to 18 reels. June Mathis then cut the film to 10 reels and added new titles. Joseph Farnham received screen credit as film editor. In 1999, the film was reissued in a 250-minute length with added footage obtained from stills of the film.

Miscellaneous Notes

The television premiere of the four-hour expanded version of Erich von Stroheim's "Greed" on Turner Classic Movies.

Released in United States 1973

Released in United States 1999

Released in United States January 12, 1924

Released in United States November 1999

Released in United States on Video May 23, 1989

Released in United States September 1999

Released in United States Winter December 25, 1924

Shown at London Film Festival (Treasures from the Archives/1999 Restoration) November 1-16, 2000.

Shown at Telluride Film Festival September 3-6, 1999.

Shown at Venice International Film Festival September 1-11, 1999.

Broadcast in USA over Turner Classic Movies December 1999.

Selected in 1991 for inclusion in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

The 1999 restoration print includes excised scenes (re-photographed from recovered stills of the original film), new intertitles, new color tinting and a new music score.

intertitles English

silent

Released in United States 1973 (Shown at FILMEX: Los Angeles International Film Exposition (The Great American Films) November 15 - December 16, 1973.)

Released in United States 1999 (Shown in New York City (Film Forum) as part of program "Von Stroheim" June 25 - July 8, 1999.)

Released in United States January 12, 1924 (The original nine and a half hour version of von Stroheim's film was shown only once on January 12, 1924. Subsequent re-edits produced several versions, including the 140 minute edit which was released in the US on Christmas 1924.)

Released in United States on Video May 23, 1989

Released in United States November 1999 (Shown at London Film Festival (Treasures from the Archives/1999 Restoration) November 1-16, 2000.)

Released in United States September 1999 (Shown at Telluride Film Festival September 3-6, 1999.)

Released in United States September 1999 (Shown at Venice International Film Festival September 1-11, 1999.)

Released in United States Winter December 25, 1924