Both Ramon Novarro and Barbara LaMarr had just appeared in Prisoner of Zenda and their careers were on the ascendant when director Rex Ingram used them once again for this remake of his 1917 picture Black Orchids. However, Lewis Stone — also a Prisoner of Zenda alumnus — almost steals the show. Leon de Severac (Pomeroy Cannon) is lecturing his daughter, Jacqueline (LaMarr), about her flirtatious ways. To hammer his point home, he tells her the following tale: Zareda, a beautiful fortune teller (also LaMarr), is loved by Ivan de Maupin (Navarro). Ivan’s father, the Baron (Edward Connelly) also lusts after her, and Ivan comes to believe she is faithless. He goes to war and Zareda learns that the Baron is planning on poisoning the Marquis Ferroni (Stone), a millionaire. She makes sure the wine glasses — one of which contains the poison — are switched, and the Baron dies instead. Zareda marries the Marquis and when Ivan returns from battle, she instigates a duel between the two men. The Marquis is fatally wounded, but when he sees his scheming wife in Ivan’s arms, he summons up enough life force to make sure that the pair meet untimely demises. Black Orchids was originally a novel by Honore de Balzac (it is today a lost film). —nytimes.com
Irish-born actor/director Rex Ingram was a set designer and painter before entering films as a performer in 1914’s Necklace of Rameses. Handsome enough to thrive as a film star, Ingram was more attracted to directing, making his debut in this capacity with the 1916 feature The Great Problem. A consummate artist, Ingram disliked the crass business haggling of Hollywood, and was particularly disenchanted with the level of American writing. He was drawn to the mystical, tragic novels of Spanish author Vicente Blasco Ibanez; many of these were unfilmable, but one Ibanez adaptation, Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1922), was not only a hit for Ingram but secured the stardom of Rudolph Valentino. Unwilling to submit to rushed production schedules and tight budgets, Ingram was not well loved in Hollywood, though he found a kindred spirit in fellow director Erich Von Stroheim, who like Ingram was meticulous in detail but careless in spending studio money. When Von Stroheim completed the eight… read more
Dishearteningly a lost film, Rex Ingram's "TRIFLING WOMEN" was notable for its depiction of subtle eroticism, its lavish sets and cinematography, and for igniting its two tragic stars, Barbara La Marr and Ramon Novarro, into two of the most eminent silent film stars of the 1920s. File this one right next to F.W. Murnau's "4 Devils" and Victor Seastrom's "The Divine Woman" for most sought after lost films.