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The Perils of Pauline (1914 serial)

The Perils of Pauline is a 1914 American melodrama film serial produced by William Randolph Hearst and released by the Eclectic film company, shown in bi-weekly installments, featuring Pearl White as the title character, an ambitious young heiress with an independent nature and a desire for adventure.

The Perils of Pauline

General Film Company & Eclectic Film Company

  • March 31, 1914 (1914-03-31)

20 chapters (total of 410 minutes)

United States

Silent with English intertitles

Despite popular associations, Pauline was never tied to a railroad track in the series, an image that was added to popular mythology by scenes in stage melodramas of the 1800s, in serials featuring the resourceful "railroad girl" Helen Holmes in her long-running series The Hazards of Helen, and in other railroad-themed Holmes cliffhangers such as The Girl and the Game. The images of Holmes' railroad adventures were blended in the public mind with Pearl White's cliffhanging adventures, probably because White became the bigger celebrity.


The serial had 20 episodes, the first being three reels (30 minutes), and the rest two reels (20 minutes) each. After the original run, it was reshown in theaters a number of times, sometimes in re-edited versions, through the 1920s. Today, The Perils of Pauline is known to exist only in a condensed, reformatted 9-chapter version (approximately 214 minutes), released in Europe in 1916 by Pathé Freres.[1]


In 2008, The Perils of Pauline was selected by the Library of Congress for the United States National Film Registry, as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Plot[edit]

Before Pauline (Pearl White) will agree to marry Harry (Crane Wilbur), who proposes marriage to her on the tennis court, she says that she wishes to be allowed to embark upon activities of her choice for a year and then write about them afterward. She proceeds then to plan to ride in a balloon, fly an airplane, drive a racing car, ride in a horse race, go on a treasure hunt, act in a motion picture, and tour a submarine, among other things, and frequently ends up in trouble after being assaulted by henchmen of Raymond Owen (Paul Panzer), her adoptive father's scheming secretary, who wants to dispose of Pauline and gain her inheritance for himself. Owen hires the disreputable Hicks (Francis Carlyle) who owes Owen money, and later Gypsy king called Balthazar to sabotage Pauline's plans, or kidnap or murder her and often Harry ends up coming to her rescue when she is trapped on a cliff or tied up in a house set afire, but as the series goes on she is also shown to be able to extricate herself from various predicaments as well. Finally, after she ends up trapped on an abandoned ship being used for target practice by the Navy and is genuinely terrified by the experience, Pauline decides she has had enough of adventuring and agrees to marry Harry. Owen is drowned by a sailor he has refused to allow to blackmail him, and all is well.

as Pauline Marvin

Pearl White

as Harry Marvin

Crane Wilbur

as Raymond Owen (Called Koerner in the European release)

Paul Panzer

as Sanford Marvin

Edward José

Francis Carlyle as Owen's Henchman, Montgomery Hicks

Clifford Bruce as Gypsy Leader Balthazar

Donald MacKenzie as Blinky Bill

as Lieutenant Summers

Jack Standing

Eleanor Woodruff as Lucille

1 - "Par le Vertige et Par le Feu" (Trial by Fire (US),Vertigo and Fire, or From Cloud to Cliff)

2 - "La Deesse du Far-West" (Goddess of the Far West)

3 - "La Tresor du Pirate" (The Pirate Treasure)

4 - "Le Virage Mortel" (The Deadly Turning (US),The Deadly Curve)

5 - "La Fil Aerien" (A Watery Doom (US), The Aerial Wire)

6 - "L'Aile Brisee" (The Shattered Plane (US), The Broken Wing)

7 - "La Plongee Tragique" (The Tragic Plunge)

8 - "Le Reptile Sous les Fleurs" (The Snake in the Flowers (US), The Serpent in the Flowers)

9 - "Le Cercueil Flottant" (The Floating Coffin)

The original serial episodes had no titles, only episode numbers. Titles for episodes have been applied to them from the condensed Pathé release of the serial or sometimes as derived from novelizations of the serial.


The original 20 episodes contained the following story elements:


Titles of the Pathé 9-episode condensed and re-edited re-release stories which have been used subsequently were:

Legacy[edit]

The Perils of Pauline is the prime example of what scholar Ben Singer has called the "serial-queen melodrama".[14] There has been a recent reassessment of Singer's model in light of broader film forms.[15]


The film's style was later subject to nostalgic caricature in many forms (e.g. Dudley Do-Right), but the original heroine was neither as helpless as the caricatures, nor did the original series include the much-parodied "tied to railroad tracks" or "tied to buzzsaw" scenarios which appeared in later films in this vein. Even the title phrase "Perils of" was often adopted by later serials, for example, in Universal's Perils of the Secret Service, Perils of the Wild, and Perils of the Yukon. and Republic Pictures' Perils of Nyoka.


The 1969–70 cartoon series The Perils of Penelope Pitstop was patterned after this serial, and included the plot point of the villain trying to eliminate the heroine so he can keep her inheritance.


The Thunderbirds episode "The Perils of Penelope" was inspired by The Perils of Pauline.

List of film serials

List of film serials by studio

List of incomplete or partially lost films

at IMDb

The Perils of Pauline