The wealthy Judge Brand, retired and growing bored with life in the genteel East, is nostalgic for the days of his youth as a prospector in the old West. He decides to rebuild the mining town of Nugget Notch and enlists his secretary, Tom Robbins, to recruit people to populate the town. Tom finds a Wild West show at the San Diego fair, "Castle's '49 Camp," which is on the verge of bankruptcy, and convinces the troupe to come to Nugget Notch with him. He falls in love with the playful and innocent young Peggy Bobbett, arousing the jealousy of the professional gambler "Gentleman Jim" Raynor. A nugget chain around Peggy's neck reveals her to be Lorena Adams, the long-lost daughter of Hugh Adams, Judge Brand's mining partner. Overcome with greed, Raynor attempts to dispose of Tom, blackmail the Bobbetts out of Peggy's inheritance, and later rob everyone in the camp. But Judge Brand and the denizens of Nugget Notch strike back, restoring law and order to the community.

'49-'17 (1917) is notable as a rare surviving example of a silent Western by a woman director. Remarkably, during the silent era the career of film directing was far more open to women than after the advent of sound. The fact that a woman director like Ruth Ann Baldwin could make an ordinary "B" Western--something that would become unthinkable in Hollywood twenty years later--is a good indication of how much the industry would change. Alice Guy-Blache and Lois Weber, the two most prominent women directors of the era, also headed their own studios. Mary Pickford, of course, was one of the owners of United Artists. Carl Laemmle's Universal Studios, in particular, became a center for woman directors, among them Lois Weber, Ida May Park, Cleo Madison and Ruth Ann Baldwin. As film historian Anthony Slide points out in his book The Silent Feminists (1996), one factor behind the gradual disappearance of woman directors was the increasing compartmentalization of roles within the industry. Whereas during the silent era it was relatively easy for an editor like Dorothy Arzner, a screenwriter like Frances Marion or a comedienne like Mabel Normand to switch to directing, such moves became increasingly difficult during the sound era. Another factor Slide mentions is the male domination of the professional guilds and unions formed in Hollywood in the 1930s.

Little is known about Ruth Ann Baldwin's life. Born in Connecticut, she worked as a newspaper journalist before signing up with Universal as a scenario writer in 1915; her projects included the popular serial The Black Box (1915). One indication of the professional respect she received was a mention of her in a 1916 issue of Photoplay: "She has long been regarded as one of the most capable of Universal's staff." Her brief but productive career as a director includes the films Retribution (1916), The Black Mantilla (1917), The Rented Man (1917), When Liz Lets Loose (1917), A Wife on Trial (1917) and '49-'17, the latter two starring her husband Leo Pierson. She later returned to scenario writing; it is not known what happened to her after 1921.

'49-'17 was moderately well received during its initial release. While it was never viewed as more than standard genre fare, reviewers in trade journals such as Motion Picture News and Moving Picture World considered it above average of its type and admired its fresh touches. Motography praised its photography and use of locations (the film was shot mainly around the San Diego area). The film is also noteworthy as one of the earliest surviving performances by Jean Hersholt (1886-1956), who appears here as the mustachioed, squinty-eyed villain "Gentleman Jim" Raynor; another early Western with Hersholt is the classic William S. Hart feature Hell's Hinges (1916). Joseph Girard (1871-1949), who plays Judge Brand, had a lengthy and prolific career as a character actor, appearing in over 200 films from the early 1910s to the early 1940s, including: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916), Sergeant York (1941) and a large number of "B" Westerns.

Director: Ruth Ann Baldwin
Scenario: Ruth Ann Baldwin, adapted from the short story "The Old West Per Contract" by William Wallace Cook
Photography: Stephen S. Norton
Principal Cast: Joseph Girard (Judge Brand), Leo Pierson (Tom Robbins), Mattie Witting (Ma Bobbett), George Pearce (Pa Bobbett), Donna Drew (Peggy Bobbett), Jean Hersholt (Gentleman Jim Raynor), Harry Rattenbury (Col. Hungerford).
BW-64m.

by James Steffen