Episodes in the Life of a Gin Bottle

October. 17,1925      
Rating:
5
Trailer Synopsis Cast

A gin bottle is personified with a spirit. As the gin bottle changes hands the spirit of the bottle tempts the various possessors to take a drink. A pro-prohibition movie, the story exemplifies the tragedies of drinking.

John Ince as  Man
Rex Lease as  The Spirit of the Bottle

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Reviews

Cubussoli
1925/10/17

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

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MoPoshy
1925/10/18

Absolutely brilliant

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ThedevilChoose
1925/10/19

When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.

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Taha Avalos
1925/10/20

The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

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kekseksa
1925/10/21

Because we are now fairly remote from the issues, it is easy to get the wrong end of the bottle when approaching films made at this time. This film is not advocating prohibition (it hardly needed advocating in 1925 because it was a fact)and the events it shows are quite clearly within the context of prohibition (the bottle changes hands covertly and we see it being topped up and refilled). It is actually designed to create awareness of a a very real danger that was not cured but largely created by prohibition - of the circulation of adulterated alcohol (the problem is frequently alluded to in the films of the time although usually as a source of comedy). The film would make no sense at all as a mere attack on alcohol (why does the bottle keep refilling itself and why are its effects so different as the story goes on?) but as a warning to avoid adulterated alcohol it makes very good sense indeed. Imagine it was about heroine and showed a syringe being passed from place to place and from hand to hand and it is easier to appreciate the purpose of the film.

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lor_
1925/10/22

Prohibition seems like a dumb experiment in American history, but this dull advocacy film shows the sentiment that brought it into law.A trivia item in IMDb claims this to be the first film to use double-exposure technique, in this case to bring Rex Lease (who receives star billing for largely just standing there) full-size into a bottle, a crude effect, as the "spirit" of the gin bottle. I'm sure Melies and others pioneered the gimmick in their trick films a couple of decades earlier.Repetitious and overdone, film shows over & over how people's lives are ruined by imbibing. It's a forerunner of the beloved exploitation "scare films" (REEFER MADNESS, etc.), but is laughably biased and obvious. Not to belittle the harmful effects of alcoholism, this short adds little or nothing to the discussion.

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