| Shot at British Instructional Films' newly opened Welwyn Studios, A Cottage 
on Dartmoor marked another milestone for Anthony Asquith following his 
impressive 1928 debut Shooting Stars. A straightforward but beautifully realised 
tale of sexual jealousy, the film easily counters the entrenched criticism that 
British cinema in the silent era was staid, stagy and lacking emotion.  Asquith was never afraid to draw on techniques more commonly associated with 
the European cinema of the day. Sally's slow realisation of Joe's presence in 
the shadows following his escape is truly chilling, while the barbershop scenes, 
relayed in flashback, pursue a particularly efficient line in visual metaphor; 
the sharpening of razors an ominous counterpoint to the shy glances across the 
manicure table. Joe's handsome features are slowly contorted by frustration and 
rage as Harry woos Sally, his broken heart warping him into the embodiment of 
malevolence we see in the opening scene: will he take his revenge and 'finish 
them off' as promised?  Yet this is no one-dimensional story of good versus evil. Asquith builds many 
layers of ambiguity, acknowledging that it is possible to be torn between two 
people, that happiness is relative, while touching on themes of loneliness, lust 
and mental illness. Ultimately, however, this is a film about love: its joys as 
well as its ravages. Just as the spoken word was about to inhibit such border-hopping, the cast 
here is triumphantly pan-European; indeed the film itself was co-produced by the 
Swedish Biograph company. Expressive English starlet Norah Baring is well 
matched with Swedish actor Uno Henning, who worked with G.W. Pabst, Victor Sjöström and Ingmar Bergman in a career spanning forty years, and Hans Adalbert 
von Schlettow, a prolific German actor killed in Berlin during the final days of 
the Second World War. A Cottage on Dartmoor is something of an historical anachronism in that it 
was not an entirely silent film. When Joe sneaks in behind Sally and Harry at 
the 'talkies', Asquith playfully references his film's status at the precarious 
transition between two eras, spotlighting the soon-to-be-unemployed orchestra. A 
sound sequence, now lost, was recorded in Germany to coincide with this scene, 
but its absence is barely noticeable: this was never produced to be a sound film 
as we know it, and is perhaps most rewardingly viewed as a final, passionate cry 
in defence of the silent aesthetic in British cinema. Simon McCallum *This film is available on BFI DVD.   |