{"title":"Unraveling Myra’s Mysteries","authors":"B. Lupack","doi":"10.7591/cornell/9781501748189.003.0010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This chapter studies The Mysteries of Myra (1916). Although the Wharton brothers apparently abandoned some of the shorter pictures that they had been considering, early in the new year of 1916, they began preparations for The Mysteries of Myra. Pioneering in both subject and execution, The Mysteries of Myra aimed to avoid the hackneyed melodramatic lines of many early serials by offering instead what one contemporary reviewer called “a wonderful new theme that compels attention because of the puzzling thoughts regarding mental telepathy and spirits presented in a manner which follows authenticated scientific discoveries.” In other words, the serial purported to demonstrate the way that science had become powerful enough to “prove” the existence of the unscientific. Myra had other cultural reverberations as well. In addition to reflecting the unconventional “New Woman” type that had come into vogue in the 1910s, Myra Maynard was also emblematic of another early twentieth-century type in America popular culture: the adolescent girl as a liminal figure who, as she comes of age, uncannily mediates between the living and the dead. The scenario for the serial was written by Charles W. Goddard, a veteran of serial pictures who had scripted The Perils of Pauline and whose association with the Whartons dated back to their first Elaine serial production in 1914. On the Myra scripts, Goddard collaborated closely with American investigator of psychic phenomena Hereward Carrington, who supplied most of the occult story lines.","PeriodicalId":345348,"journal":{"name":"Silent Serial Sensations","volume":"16 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Silent Serial Sensations","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501748189.003.0010","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This chapter studies The Mysteries of Myra (1916). Although the Wharton brothers apparently abandoned some of the shorter pictures that they had been considering, early in the new year of 1916, they began preparations for The Mysteries of Myra. Pioneering in both subject and execution, The Mysteries of Myra aimed to avoid the hackneyed melodramatic lines of many early serials by offering instead what one contemporary reviewer called “a wonderful new theme that compels attention because of the puzzling thoughts regarding mental telepathy and spirits presented in a manner which follows authenticated scientific discoveries.” In other words, the serial purported to demonstrate the way that science had become powerful enough to “prove” the existence of the unscientific. Myra had other cultural reverberations as well. In addition to reflecting the unconventional “New Woman” type that had come into vogue in the 1910s, Myra Maynard was also emblematic of another early twentieth-century type in America popular culture: the adolescent girl as a liminal figure who, as she comes of age, uncannily mediates between the living and the dead. The scenario for the serial was written by Charles W. Goddard, a veteran of serial pictures who had scripted The Perils of Pauline and whose association with the Whartons dated back to their first Elaine serial production in 1914. On the Myra scripts, Goddard collaborated closely with American investigator of psychic phenomena Hereward Carrington, who supplied most of the occult story lines.
本章研究《迈拉之谜》(1916)。虽然沃顿兄弟显然放弃了他们一直在考虑的一些较短的影片,但在1916年新年伊始,他们开始筹备《迈拉之谜》。《迈拉之谜》在主题和执行上都是先锋,它旨在避免许多早期连续剧的陈腐情节,而是提供了一位当代评论家所称的“一个奇妙的新主题,它吸引了人们的注意力,因为它以一种遵循真实科学发现的方式呈现了关于心灵感应和灵魂的令人费解的想法。”换句话说,这个系列意在证明科学已经强大到足以“证明”不科学的存在。迈拉还有其他的文化影响。除了反映了20世纪10年代开始流行的非传统“新女性”类型,迈拉·梅纳德也是20世纪初美国流行文化中另一种类型的象征:青春期的女孩,作为一个阈值的人物,随着年龄的增长,她不可思议地在生与死之间进行调解。该剧的剧本是由查尔斯·w·戈达德(Charles W. Goddard)撰写的,他是一位资深的连环电影编剧,曾为《波琳的危险》写过剧本,他与沃顿夫妇的关系可以追溯到1914年他们第一次拍摄《伊莱恩》时。在《迈拉》的剧本中,戈达德与美国通灵现象研究者赫里沃德·卡灵顿密切合作,他提供了大部分神秘故事的线索。