THE SCARLET LETTER
1926
Victor Sjöström

SYNOPSIS
In a rigid Puritan settlement in seventeenth century New England, Hester Prynne bears a child out of wedlock and is condemned to wear the letter A as a mark of shame. Refusing to name the father, she endures public scorn with quiet dignity. The secret binds her to the tormented minister Dimmesdale, whose concealed guilt corrodes his spirit as the community’s moral severity tightens around them.
CRITIQUE
Victor Sjöström transforms Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel into a restrained yet emotionally resonant silent drama. Lillian Gish’s performance imbues Hester with luminous resilience, shifting the narrative from moral condemnation to spiritual endurance. The austere compositions and natural settings temper melodrama with psychological gravity. Rather than sensationalizing sin, the film interrogates collective judgment, revealing silent cinema’s capacity for introspective moral inquiry.