Algie, the Miner
Algie, the Miner
| 28 February 1912 (USA)
Algie, the Miner Trailers

When Algie Allmore asks to marry Clarice, the young woman's father gives him one year to prove that he's a man.

Reviews
NekoHomey

Purely Joyful Movie!

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Libramedi

Intense, gripping, stylish and poignant

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Helloturia

I have absolutely never seen anything like this movie before. You have to see this movie.

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Ogosmith

Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.

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Michael_Elliott

Algie, the Miner (1912) ** (out of 4) This comedy short was shown on TCM a several weeks back to highlight gay folks in early Hollywood. The title character in this short (and various other films shown) isn't out and out gay but is shown (in the writer's words) as a "sissy". Algie wants to marry a woman but her father says no because the young man is too much of a sissy but the father tells Algie that he can marry the daughter if he turns himself into a man within one year. The writer of the book and the one who introduced the film makes a lot of examples of why this character is gay but the film itself really isn't anything special as there are no laughs anywhere to be had.

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MartinHafer

This is, like most films of the day, a very short movie. At only ten minutes, it tells the tale of a very wimpy and rather effeminate man's change to manhood. Billy Quirk wants to marry a girl--and considering how he dresses and acts, it's actually a little surprising he wants her. But before he is allowed to marry the girl, he is told to go out and prove his manhood, so he becomes, of all things, a cowboy. Well, despite the impossibility of this task, he quickly proves himself and when he an his new-found friend arrive back home, the family is actually scared of the super-virile Billy, since he's now a tough hombre.This is an odd film because it really looks as if the producers are trying to say that Billy is gay (based on the way he dresses and because he kisses the first cowboy he meets) but the plot involves him wanting to marry a real live girl! An odd but very watchable film that's good for a few laughs. Some of the other reviews scored the film lower, but for 1912, this was a very good film--as I have seen several hundred very early films and this is better than most.

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whpratt1

This very brief film is about a man called Algie Allmore played by Billy Quirk who is a young man who appears as a sissy or pansy and his intended father-in-law wants him to prove he is a man in one year if he wants to marry his daughter. So, Algie heads West dressed up like a funny cowboy with a very tiny pistol and a weird looking western hat. Algie meets up with some very rough and tough cowboys who laugh their heads off just looking at poor Algie. However, Algie gets broken in with his surroundings by finding a gold mine, riding a horse and the ability of knowing what to do with a gun and and is able to stand by himself against all the cowboys. Funny film and enjoyable.

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preppy-3

DEFINITE SPOILERS!!!! Algie (a VERY effeminate man) must prove his manhood to marry the daughter of a rich man. To prove this he goes out west and (after kissing two men on the cheek) is "taught" by Big Jim on how to be a man. This leads to utterly predictable "comedy". It seems hopeless but then Algie proves himself by saving Jim from being robbed and he goes home to marry his girlfriend.The story is silly, the comedy painful and the acting is WAY over the top even for a silent movie. But, in terms of gay characters, this is important. It's one of the first representations of a gay character on screen and (even though it's negative) it is historically important. Also Algie DOES prove himself to be a man at the end. The extremely effeminate mannerisms that Algie shows may offend some gay viewers, but it really shouldn't. It's just a sign of its time.

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