Sunday, February 1, 2026

Silent Film of the Month: A Roman Scandal (1919)

 




Run Time: 24 minutes. Studio: Christie Film Company. Director: Al Christie. Writers: Scott Darling, Frank Roland Conklin. Producer: Al Christie. Main Cast: Colleen Moore, Earle Rodney, Eddie Barry,
Billy Bletcher, Ward Caulfield. Cinematographer: Anton Nagy. 

Most silent comedy fans know the work of the Keystone (or Mack Sennett) and Hal Roach comedy studios very well. However other comedy studios of the era tend to go quite overlooked. One such studio is the Christie Film Company. This is a shame as many of their comedies are still delightful today. Case in point is our Silent Film of the Month, A Roman Scandal.  

In this film Mary (Colleen Moore) refuses to get married until she makes it in show business, which upsets her fiancée Jack (Earle Rodney). When a nearby stage company goes on strike, Mary volunteers herself and her fiancée to fill in for some of the roles. However, the two end up causing more trouble than help.

This is a truly delightful comedy. Certain story points may have dated. For instance, if this were made today, there is no reason why Mary couldn't have both gotten married and pursued a stage career. Despite this the humor has not dated at all. This is still a very funny movie. The play, even before Mary and Jack get ahold of it is hilarious in its cheapness and ineptitude. It is even more funny thanks to Mary's reaction to the play. Her being as enamored of this play as if it was a great masterpiece is very funny. When Mary and Jack get ahold of the play, it becomes even more hilariously inept. The scene with the fake bull will never cease to crack me up. With delightful gag after delightful gag, a fast pace and the charms of its stars, this is a winner in every area.   

Al Christie (this film's director and producer) was born on November 23, 1886, in London, Ontario, Canada (legendary comedy producer Mack Sennett was also born in Canada). Al Christie had worked as a stage manager and director for Liebler and Company. During a summer lay-off he began his movie career in 1909 as a director for the Nestor Film Company. It wouldn't be long until his career was tied to comedy. In 1911, he went to direct a series of comedies based off Bud Duncan's Mutt and Jeff comic strip that starred, Bud Duncan. In 1912 he moved to the studio's new California facility to direct a series of shorts known as Wild West Weekly. On this series he worked with such comedy stars as Eddie Lyons, Lee Moran, Victoria Forde, Betty Compson, Stella Adams, Billie Rhodes and Neal Burns. By January 1916 along with his brother Charles Christie, he began to produce his own comedies under the Nestor name. Later that same year he established his own studio. This studio would become one the three most popular comedy studios at the time along with Mack Sennett (or Keystone) and Hal Roach. Unlike those other studios the Christie Film Company would often rely more on situational humor than outright slapstick. The films also tended to focus more on younger stars. A 1917 trade ad stated, "Christie Comedies are Comedies of Youth!" In this ad "Youth" was spelled all in capital letters and had images of the studio's stars appearing within the word. The films also tended to have a greater focus on female characters having them play a direct part in the comedic action. This brings us to the star of this film, Colleen Moore. 

Colleen Moore was born as Kathleen Morrison on August 19, 1899, in Port Huron, Michigan. Her first screen test was made at Essanay and came about because the famous film director D.W. Griffith owed her uncle, Walter Howey (managing editor of the Chicago American) a favor. However, the test went well, and she made her film debut in the feature length crime drama The Bad Boy (1917). Though some false publicity claimed she was an extra in D.W. Griffit and h's movie Intolerance (1916), this statement has been proven to be erroneous. With her gift for comedy, it was decided that she would benefit from working with a studio that specialized in comedy. Colleen would state in her 1968 memoir, Silent Star, that her grandmother disapproved of the rowdy Sennett comedies and that is why she signed up with Christie. For Christie she would make two short comedies (this one and Her Bridal Night-Mare (1920)) and two features (So Long Letty (1920) and His Nibs (1921)). Both the short comedies are still available to watch, while the two features are considered lost. 

Scott Darling, a writer on this film was born on May 28, 1898. During the silent era he had written many short comedies for both the Kalem studio and Christie Film Co. as well as having directed 27 movies for Universal. However, he is best remembered today for his work in talkies. During the talkie era he wrote scripts for such movies as The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942), Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943) and Laurel and Hardy's films for the Fox Studio. 



Exhibitor's Herald, 1919



Motion Picture News, 1920

The following is from an issue of The Moving Picture World dated, February 20, 1920.

"Starting the New Year right, the Plaza, San Fransico, Calif., comes out with a page for its New Year attractions and gives rather more than half a space to a Christie comedy, 'A Roman Scandal.' This is going to be a great year for comedy and live managers realizing this, are starting in to make the most of their comedy material.

"There has never been a time when comedies could not sell some tickets the feature could not reach, but the demand now is for more and more for comedy and the wise manager caters to this demand by giving more space to his small stuff. More than once the comedy has topped the five reel feature on the general proposition that the feature can take care of itself, and in every instance the additional space has paid. This full page is exceptional, but it is by no means an isolated instance."    


If you wish to watch this delightful film, you can do so below.




    


Resources Used

A-Z of Silent Film Comedy by Glen Mitchell

https://mediahistoryproject.org/

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