Recommendations
Senior Film Conservator

The United States-born brilliance of The Fifth Commandment offers a unique artistic bravery, the profound questions raised in 1915 still require cinematic answers today. Our curated selection of recommendations echoes the very essence of The Fifth Commandment.
In the Pantheon of cult cinema, The Fifth Commandment to provide a definitive example of Unknown Director's stylistic genius.
Carl Winters is a teacher of music, at the New York College of Music. Among his pupils is Alice Winthrop, daughter of Stephen Winthrop, a banker. Carl and Alice are lovers. His employer, Director Bergh, witnesses a love scene between the two in the college. He dismisses Carl and informs the father of Alice of her love affair. The banker warns Alice that she must not see Winters again. The girl assures her father of Carl's honorable intentions and pleads to have him grant Winters an interview. The banker refuses. The girl tells Carl what has happened and that her father will leave the city with her for a long period. Carl asks her to become his wife. She consents and they are married. When Alice tells her father of her marriage, he orders her from his home. Carl and Alice spend their honeymoon in Carl's boarding house. Carl accepts an offer to become musical director in Rio De Janeiro. Alice promises to join him there as soon as he is established. Several months pass. The banker learns that his daughter is to become a mother. Mr. Winthrop goes to her and persuades her to return to his home. Alice, in her correspondence with her husband, has not told him of her secret so as to cause him no worry in his new position. Winthrop in his hatred for Carl intercepts and destroys the letters and cables which the husband and wife send to each other. Carl has met with success in his new position but is distressed at receiving no news from his wife. A daughter is born to Alice, who dies from septic poisoning. Carl, alarmed by his wife's silence, resolves to return and to bring his wife back with him. Before his departure he receives a cable from her father announcing the death of his daughter, Carl's wife. After a long illness, Carl leaves the hospital, friendless and disheartened. He earns a livelihood singing in amusement places, accompanied by a harp player, a faithful fellow, devoted to Carl, his teacher. Years have gone by and Carl's daughter, of whose existence he has been kept ignorant, is now a girl of seventeen years. Her father in South America has become gray and old and is making a living as a street singer. His wish is to visit the grave of his wife and he returns with his harpist to New York. One day his daughter while out riding is attracted by the sounds of music. She speaks to the singer and invites him to come to her home the next day, which is her birthday, to play and sing for her. Carl consents. Carl and the harpist go to the Winthrop home and he sings for the young girl, whose identity is unknown to him, the song he had often sung tor his wife for whom he composed it. The girl goes to dress for dinner, asking Carl to continue the song. He sees a photograph. It is the portrait of his wife. The banker enters and accuses Carl and the harpist of being impostors and thieves. Carl learns from Winthrop that the young girl is the child of Winthrop's daughter, Carl's own child. Winthrop orders Carl from the house when Carl tells him that he is the father of the girl. The banker offers Carl money to conceal his identity. Carl refuses the money, but resolves to go out of his daughter's life to preserve her happiness. After a final meeting with his daughter, he is about to leave the house when the banker, filled with remorse, tells his grandchild, "Alice, this man is your father. You must honor thy father and thy mother, so sayeth the Fifth Commandment." The story ends with father and daughter embracing, the banker asking Carl's forgiveness.
Based on the unique artistic bravery of The Fifth Commandment, our vault has identified these titles as the most compelling follow-up experiences for fans of cult cinema:
Dir: Unknown Director
Nothing got the Aussie adrenalin flowing in the early 1900's than some serious gold-fields drama.
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Dir: Unknown Director
What is the true power of prayer? This doc examines the impact of speaking to God, from medical and scientific sources, to testimonials from those who've been touched by faith.
Dir: Unknown Director
A fascinating piece of cinema that shares thematic elements.
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Dir: Unknown Director
A fascinating piece of cinema that shares thematic elements.
Dir: Unknown Director
This fascinating region was set apart as a Government Reservation, to be known as Yellowstone Park, in 1S72. The park proper is about 62 miles long, from north to south, and 54 miles wide. While the tourist may reach the park entrance by rail, it has been decreed by Uncle Sam that beyond the Great Lava Arch Gateway the iron horse shall not trespass. So here leaving the pathway of steel we take our place on one of the six-horse coaches that run from Gardiner up to Mammoth Hot Springs. Coaching, Troops, Morris Basin, Great Fountain, Pack mules, Riverside Geyser, Old Faithful, Deer and Bear, Upper Falls, Canyon, Field Glasses. Standing on a balcony at Artist's Point we take up the field glass to have a tele-photo panorama of these weird walls with their clinging pine trees. We look down the Great Gorge. On either side walls of exquisite color rise with here and there pinnacle-like great church spires. Above our heads fly eagles who build their nests and raise their young on the top of these lofty peaks. The scene is a powerful one and beyond words, but the Great Falls add force and quality of action which tempers and dignities the whole scene. This enormous volume of water that looks like a curtain of lace, tumbles over a cliff of volcanic rock 310 feet. Here the traveler finds himself spellbound, held by the pure beauty of the scene. In turning away he pauses to marvel at the wonders of nature and the beauties of our great national playground.
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Dir: Unknown Director
This subject is the same as No. 1863 [ANNA HELD], but shown in full length figure. Both are admirable, and make hits either in the Biograph or Mutoscope.
Dir: Unknown Director
A fascinating piece of cinema that shares thematic elements.
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Dir: Unknown Director
A fascinating piece of cinema that shares thematic elements.
Dir: Unknown Director
The life of Jesus Christ. The film is believed to possibly be a US re-release of Alice Guy's The Birth, the Life and the Death of Christ (1906).
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Analysis relative to The Fifth Commandment
| Film Title | Atmosphere | Complexity | Similarity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attack on the Gold Escort | Gothic | Linear | 88% Match |
| Fides | Surreal | Layered | 89% Match |
| May Day Parade | Gothic | Abstract | 88% Match |
| Nelson-Wolgast Fight | Ethereal | Abstract | 96% Match |
| A Trip to the Wonderland of America | Tense | Abstract | 97% Match |
This guide was algorithmically generated using the cinematic metadata of Unknown Director's archive. Last updated: 6/17/2026.
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