The feature of this film is the presence of wild animals, deer and wolves. They seem almost out of place in a background so filled with suggestions of an old civilization, but they are at least real. The presence of the wolves also gives, more or less effectively, a sense of danger to a little boy, brother of the heroine, who is pictured as lost. The girl's lover was out of favor with the girl's father and his rescue of the kid from the den of the wolves gives him a chance to square things. There are several comic incidents in the film at which the audience laughed. The story is not at all convincing, but there is a good deal of entertainment in it. - The Moving Picture World, October 14, 1911
See also
Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews