Afterglow (1923 film)
Afterglow is a 1923 British silent drama film directed by G. B. Samuelson and Walter Summers and starring Lillian Hall-Davis, Fred Hearne and James Lindsay. It was made at Isleworth Studios.[1]
Afterglow | |
---|---|
Directed by | Walter Summers G. B. Samuelson |
Produced by | G. B. Samuelson |
Written by | Walter Summers |
Starring | Lillian Hall-Davis Fred Hearne James Lindsay |
Production company | Napoleon Films |
Distributed by | Napoleon Films |
Release date | September 1923 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | Silent English intertitles |
Cast
- Lillian Hall-Davis as Ethel
- Fred Hearne as Bayard Delavel
- James Lindsay as Howard Massingham
- Minna Grey as Grace Andover
- Annette Benson as Myra Massingham
- Simeon Stuart as Judge Maitland
- Walter McEwen as Bob Farley
- Caleb Porter
gollark: Its internal HTTP logs, which I figured out how to get it to dump, do appear to show it doing *something*, but I don't understand them enough to say what.
gollark: The really weird thing is that Firefox didn't actually seem to be *sending* any request or whatever for the websockets. Nothing appears in devtools, wireshark didn't show anything websocket-looking (although I am not very good at using it, I think it was working because it showed the regular HTTP requests), mitmproxy didn't say anything either, and the webserver logs don't show it.
gollark: I've decided to just update caddy and see if that helps, since I am a bit overdue for switching to v2.
gollark: I have some applications sending data over websocket to the browser - mostly JSON. They work in Chrome and Firefox on Android, but not on Firefox on my Linux systems - it just says "failed to establish connection". Specifically, they work if I run them directly on my local machine but not behind my server's reverse proxy.
gollark: Anyone know a good place to ask about this?
References
- Harris p.66
Bibliography
- Harris, Ed. Britain's Forgotten Film Factory: The Story of Isleworth Studios. Amberley Publishing, 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.