![Silent Era Films on Home Video](img/263x24-HomeVideoHeader.jpg) Reviews of silent film releases on home video. Copyright © 1999-2025 by Carl Bennett and the Silent Era Company. All Rights Reserved. |
Tonka of the
Gallows
(1930)
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This late silent era drama was directed by Karel Anton and stars Yugoslavian actress Ita Rina, Russian actress Vera Baranovskaia, and Josef Rovenský and John Mylong-Münz.
Tonka, a small town girl (Rina), returns home for an idyllic visit with her mother (Baranovskaya) and a former suitor (Mylong) but is soon drawn back to the big city, where she resumes her work as a prostitute.
One evening, police visit the brothel with an unusual request for the working girls there. A death-row inmate has requested a visit from a woman before his hanging. The girls are repulsed by the thought, except for the fatalistic Tonka who is taken by police to the prison. The murderer inmate (Rovenský) is distressed that he has been paired with such a young girl but Tonka’s compassion for the man leads to a desperate bond.
Even though no intercourse was undertaken, Tonka is subsequently shunned by former customers and ridiculed by the other prostitutes. Tormented by her own sadness and by the thoughtlessness of others, the morose Tonka is cast out by the house madam. One evening, she is found on the streets by Jan, Tonka’s small-town suitor, who convinces her to return home and they will be married.
Everything is well until a former customer of Tonka’s, a traveling salesman (Felix Kühne), appears in town and stumbles into a conversation with her fiancé. Tonka’s notorious identity is accidently made known to Jan, who is shocked and angered by the revelation. Shunned now by fiancé, mother and townspeople, Tonka returns to the city where she leads a solitary and tragic existence as an alcoholic streetwalker.
Originally shot in Prague late in 1929 as a silent production, before its release the film was post-synchronized in Paris with the addition of music, sound effects, and two lip-synched songs performed by Ita Rina and an uncredited vocalist.
Director/producer Karel Anton turns in a very good film with atmospheric cinematography by Eduard Hoesch, which is full of rich shadows contrasted by intelligently lit actors, unexpected camera movement, double-exposure and the occasional high and low-angle shot.
Ita Rina turns in a very good performance, but we are most impressed with that of Vera Baranovskaia, best remembered for her starring role in Mother (1926), who is wonderfully expressive and engaging as Tonka’s mother.
— Carl Bennett
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