I'll Get Him Yet

I'll Get Him Yet is a lost[1][2] 1919 American silent comedy film starring Dorothy Gish and directed by Elmer Clifton. It was produced by D. W. Griffith under his production unit New Art Film. Paramount Pictures distributed the film.[3][4]

I'll Get Him Yet
Film still of Gish and Barthelmess
Directed byElmer Clifton
Leigh R. Smith (assistant)
Produced byNew Art Film Company
Written byHarry Carr (screen story)
StarringDorothy Gish
CinematographyJohn Leezer
Lee Garmes
Distributed byFamous Players-Lasky
Paramount Pictures
Release date
May 18, 1919
Running time
50 minutes; 5 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[5] Susy Faraday Jones (Gish), daughter of a wealthy and none too indulgent father, owns a railroad that runs to the seashore and, in order to improve the schedule, she cuts off the town of Rivera as a stop. Two young men in her employ, her general manager and superintendent, each attempt to make love to her, much to that bored young woman's disgust. She meets Scoop McCready (Barthelmess), a reporter, in whom she takes an unusual interest. Soon they are engaged, but when he asks her father Bradford Warrington Jones (Fawcett) for her hand and is peremptorily ordered out of the house, he decides he will have nothing further to do with the rich girl. Susy does not have an easy time winning back Scoop, but after she finally agrees to give up every penny of her fathers wealth they get married and settle down in Rivera. The arrival at their cottage of her lawyer and two railroad officials causes unexpected complications with amusing attempts by her to hide the men in closets and under sofas until she finally explains their presence to her jealous husband.

Cast

gollark: It's not some sort of conspiracy-theoretic thing to say that the US has ridiculously broad surveillance, there was Snowden and everything else.
gollark: The ALLEGED goal.
gollark: The US also has massively broad effectively unregulated mass surveillance, which is highly bees.
gollark: There's interesting content about basically every topic you might like, people to talk to who are sometimes not terrible, and you can actually be taken seriously if you know some things.
gollark: Most of it, anyway.

References

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