Outcast (1917 film)

Outcast (sometimes listed as The Outcast) is a lost[1] 1917 American drama film directed by Dell Henderson and starring Ann Murdock. It was based on the play Outcast by Hubert Henry Davies. It was produced by Empire All-Star Corp., a production unit of the late Charles Frohman who had produced the play starring Elsie Ferguson. Ferguson would reprise the role in a 1922 Paramount film.[2]

Outcast
Advertisement for film
Directed byDell Henderson
Wesley Ruggles (assistant)
Written byAnthony Paul Kelly
Based onOutcast
by Hubert Henry Davies
StarringAnn Murdock
CinematographyHarry L. Keepers
Production
company
Empire All-Star Corporation
Distributed byMutual Film Corporation
Release date
  • September 10, 1917 (1917-09-10)
Running time
6 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[3] Valentine (Calvert), engaged to Geoffrey (Powell), breaks her engagement so that she can marry Lord Moreland (Carrington) so that she may have everything that she desires. Discouraged, Geoffrey associates with Miriam Gibson (Murdock), a woman of the streets known as the outcast. Miriam becomes devoted to Geoffrey and does all that is in her power to make him happy. Valentine is jealous because Geoffrey is so happy and believes that by coming into his life she will make it hard for him. Geoffrey, who still loves her, asks her to go away with him to South America, divorce Lord Moreland, and marry him. But Valentine refuses to give up London. So Geoffrey sends Valentine away and marries Miriam, and the two happily set out for their South American home.

Cast

  • Ann Murdock - Miriam Gibson
  • David Powell - Geoffrey Sherwood
  • Catherine Calvert - Valentine
  • Richard Hatteras - Hugh
  • Jules Raucourt - Tony
  • Herbert Ayling - Mr. Guest
  • Reginald Carrington - Lord Moreland
  • Kate Sergeantson - Mrs. Guest
  • H. Ashton Tonge - Taylor
  • V. L. Granville - Gerald
  • Maud Andrew - Bemish, Miriam's Maid
  • James C. Malaidy - Charles Gibson, Miriam's Father
  • Charles Hampden - Monsieur Duval
  • Zolya Talma - Nelly

Reception

Like many American films of the time, Outcast was subject to cuts by city and state film censorship boards. The Chicago Board of Censors issued an Adults Only permit and required cuts of three gambling scenes and the intertitle "I was driven to the streets, I had no choice."[4]

gollark: I'm sure Google has lots of spare GPU/TPU power. They have some ridiculous GPT-3-scale image/text model in development now, and use BERT-like entities for search parsing.
gollark: I'd think that it would be possible to detect it if you had a lot of samples of it versus real human text. And there was this demo highlighting differences between human and GPTous text, via highlighting low-probability-from-the-model words (which are often also the most important).
gollark: I wonder if Google/search engines generally can detect GPT-3ous content yet.
gollark: That sounds hard, actually.
gollark: What if we generate VAST quantities of novel and interesting content?

See also

References

  1. "Outcast". Lcweb2.loc.gov. 12 October 2017. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  2. "Detail view of Movies Page". Afi.com. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  3. "Reviews: The Outcast". Exhibitors Herald. New York: Exhibitors Herald Company. 5 (12): 27–28. September 15, 1917.
  4. "Official Cut-Outs by the Chicago Board of Censors". Exhibitors Herald. 5 (14): 33. September 29, 1917.


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