Branding Broadway

Branding Broadway is a 1918 American western film directed by and starring William S. Hart, written by C. Gardner Sullivan, and produced by Thomas H. Ince and Hart.[1]

Branding Broadway
Film poster
Directed byWilliam S. Hart
Produced byThomas H. Ince
William S. Hart
Written byC. Gardner Sullivan
StarringWilliam S. Hart
Seena Owen
Arthur Shirley
CinematographyJoseph H. August
Production
company
William S. Hart Productions
Distributed byArtcraft Pictures
Release date
December, 1918
Running time
50 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Plot

A tough cowboy, Robert Sands (played by William S. Hart) is banished from an Arizona town for his drunk and disorderly comment. He moves to New York and gets a job as bodyguard and guardian to a wealthy and spoiled young man. He falls in love with a restaurant owner (played by Seena Owen) who has compromising letters from the young man Sands is charged with protecting.

Cast

ActorRole
William S. HartRobert Sands
Seena OwenMary Lee
Arthur ShirleyLarry Harrington
Andrew RobsonHarrington Sr
Lew ShortDick Horn (as Lewis W. Short)
Film still with Seena Owen, Arthur Shirley, and William S. Hart

Reception

Like many American films of the time, Branding Broadway was subject to restrictions and cuts by city and state film censorship boards. For example, the Chicago Board of Censors required, in Reel 1, that four scenes of Sands and his gang shooting up town be reduced by half, and cuts of three cafe fight scenes and, in Reel 5, all but the first and last scenes of the attack on the young woman.[2]

Preservation status

The film is preserved in the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA for short) collection in New York.[3] [4]

gollark: I have resolved one particular problem. There is less standing between me and meme OCR.
gollark: Idea: I make Macron but it's just osmarkslisp™+forth.
gollark: Just use the Macron combinators to rewrite the AST attributes as expanded runtime queen logic.
gollark: Yes, it does.
gollark: `AssertionError: Bad argument number for Assign: 2, expecting 3` you, then?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.