A Cure for Suffragettes

A Cure for Suffragettes is a 1913 American silent comedy film. It was written by Anita Loos and directed by Edward Dillon for Biograph Company.[1] It stars Dorothy Bernard, Kathleen Butler, and Dorothy Gish.[2][3]

A Cure for Suffragettes
Directed byEdward Dillon
Story byAnita Loos
StarringDorothy Bernard
Kathleen Butler
Dorothy Gish
Production
company
Release date
November 17, 1913

Plot

gollark: I don't want tiny compact-machine-fitting things (well, I kind of do, but separate to giant, awe-inspiring ones incorporating fusion plasma injectors of death, hopefully), I want giant ones requiring huge amounts of infrastructure to support it, with cool visual effects, massive (actually fitting, you know, a *fusion* reactor) power output (ideally via steam turbines), that sort of thing.
gollark: Also, I hope the new fusion reactors take inspiration from ReactorCraft.
gollark: The mekanism ones are a bit crazy. If you want oxygen, feeding the separator RF from its own hydrogen run through a gas-burning generator, *it works fine*.
gollark: Even when I had about 8 upgraded ones.
gollark: The nuclearcraft ones are just too slow.

References

  1. Graham, C.C. (1985). D.W. Griffith and the Biograph Company. Filmmakers Series. Scarecrow Press. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-8108-1806-4. Retrieved May 31, 2019. A CURE FOR SUFFRAGETTES Edward Dillon (d); Anita Loos (au); finished 24 September 1913 (f); New York (1); 17 November 1913 (r); 405 feet (rl); LU1630 ...
  2. Barrett-Fox, Jason (2012). "Rhetorics of Indirection, Indiscretion, Insurrection: The "Feminine Style" of Anita Loos, 1912–1925". JAC. 32 (1/2): 221–249. ISSN 2162-5190. JSTOR 41709681.
  3. Sloan, Kay (1981). "Sexual Warfare in the Silent Cinema: Comedies and Melodramas of Woman Suffragism" (PDF). American Quarterly. 33 (4): 412–436. doi:10.2307/2712526. ISSN 0003-0678. JSTOR 2712526.


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