Movie spotlight
Brothers
This subject deals first with a woman who has lost her husband. Her two boys are now her mainstay and support. These boys are aged respectively 6 and 8. They sell papers and give their earnings to their mother. The elder of the boys is inclined to be wild and one day be is arrested for craps playing and is sent to a reformatory.
Insights
Plot Summary
This silent short film, with an unknown director and cast, likely explored familial themes, given its title. As with many films from this early era, specific plot details are largely lost to time. The narrative would have relied heavily on visual storytelling and intertitles to convey its message to audiences.
Critical Reception
As a silent short film from 1912, "Brothers" predates modern critical review systems like Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic. Information regarding its contemporary reception or any subsequent critical analysis is extremely limited or non-existent due to its age and the ephemeral nature of early cinema.
What Reviewers Say
Information on critical consensus is unavailable due to the film's age.
Contemporary reviews for short films from this period are rarely preserved.
The film's narrative themes are inferred from its title.
Google audience: No audience reviews are available for this film, as it is from a period before widespread public film commentary.
Fun Fact
Many silent films from the early 1910s, especially shorts, have been lost entirely due to the nitrate film stock used, which was highly flammable and degraded over time. It is possible that "Brothers (1912)" is one of these lost films.
AI-generated overview · Verify ratings on official sources