Manhattan (1924 film)

Manhattan is a 1924 American silent romantic adventure film directed by R. H. Burnside featuring Richard Dix in his first starring role.[2] A wealthy New Yorker falls in love with a burglar's sister.

Manhattan
Lobby card
Directed byR. H. Burnside
Produced byAdolph Zukor
Jesse L. Lasky
Written byPaul Sloane (scenario)
Frank Tuttle (scenario)
Based onThe Definite Object
by Jeffery Farnol[1]
StarringRichard Dix
CinematographyHal Rosson
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • October 28, 1924 (1924-10-28)
Running time
7 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Cast

Reception

Mordaunt Hall, critic for The New York Times, gave the movie a mixed review, stating that Kelly's "performance is easily the outstanding one in this production, and singularly enough it is the first time that he has acted before the camera."[2] Hall thought, however, that Dix gave "just another motion-picture performance" and the narrative was "stretched to the breaking point."[2]

Preservation status

A print of the film reportedly survives at Cinemateket Svenska Filminstitutet, Stockholm.[3][4]

gollark: As of now, it is not possible to actually check this.
gollark: "Trueness"?
gollark: What exactly is the match rate of just randomly encountering people? Probably lower.
gollark: > I am failing to find people who I like in order to date them.> How can I fix this?> I know! I'll just ignore a possible well-understood solution and mock anyone who uses it.
gollark: That's for actual EM radiation, this would presumably just be a big magnetic field.

References


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