Sexton Blake (1928 serial)

Sexton Blake is a 1928 six-part silent film serial produced by British Filmcraft. The serial stars Langhorne Burton as the fictional detective Sexton Blake, and Mickey Brantford as his assistant Tinker.[1]

Sexton Blake
Directed byGeorge A. Cooper
George J. Banfield
Leslie Eveleigh
Based onSexton Blake
StarringLanghorne Burton
Mickey Brantford
Production
company
British Filmcraft
Release date
  • 1928 (1928)
Running time
6 short films
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageSilent, with English intertitles

Some films have survived and are kept in the Huntley Film Archives.[2]

Films

All films feature Langhorne Burton as Sexton Blake and Mickey Brantford as Tinker.[1] Mrs. Bardell (Mrs. Fred Emney) appears in Silken Threads and The Mystery of the Silent Death.

1. The Clue of the Second Goblet

Directed by George A. Cooper.[1] Based on the 1927 novel of the same name by G. H. Teed.[3]

2. Blake the Lawbreaker

Directed by George A. Cooper.[1]

3. Sexton Blake, Gambler

Directed by George J. Banfield.[1]

4. Silken Threads

Directed by Leslie Eveleigh.[1]

Mr. Stormcroft (Leslie Perrins) visits Blake after his father was murdered in their West End mansion, where many female guests are staying. His father was shot in his library when most guests were in the drawing room. A search did not turn up a gun or revolver. Arriving at the library, Tinker discovers a piece of silken cloth stuck in a corner of the chair, and Blake notices scratch marks on the desk. The assailant must have been a woman! Blake breaks into the house several days later to examine the women's wardrobe, where he finds a dress that matches the cloth. Returning to the library, he discovers that Stormcroft's father, an English secret agent, had a secret drawer in his desk. He also finds the gun which looks like a walking stick. Just as he begins to call the police, the villainess, Valerie Simpson (Marjorie Hume), renders him unconscious with a smash on the head, but her escape is thwarted by Tinker and the policemen who arrive to check on Blake. Blake wakes up and tells Mrs. Stormcroft that Valerie is not the daughter of an old friend, but a Soviet agent named Nadia Petrowskaya. He has discovered a letter (conveniently written in English) addressed to "Sovian [sic] Headquarters" in her locked box. She shot the old man when the latter refused to give her an important document.

5. The Great Office Mystery

Director unknown. Based on the 1917 novel of the same name by Jack Lewis.[4]

  • Ronald Curtis as Leon Kestrel

6. The Mystery of the Silent Death

Directed by Leslie Eveleigh.[1] Possibly based on The Menace of the Silent Death (1926) by E. J. Murray?[5]

Reception

Viewing two films several decades after their initial release, Norman Wright judged Silken Threads "ghastly" and The Clue of the Second Goblet "a little better — just a little."[6]

gollark: You can't objectively have a "should" without an "in order to".
gollark: > this is how everyone's mindset should look like for building a better society.This is also subjective.
gollark: > but I don't care about human rights of people who don't care about human rights of other peopleGreat, so you picked that *subjective* judgement, okay.
gollark: Other primates are pretty social and whatnot, even some birds have tool use, I've heard that the main advantage we has is just good transfer learning capability.
gollark: Many animals can do many of the things human can.

References

  1. Hodder, Mark. "Sexton Blake Filmography". Blakiana. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  2. "Search results for Sexton Blake". Huntley Film Archives. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  3. Hodder, Mark. "Sexton Blake Bibliography: 1927". Blakiana. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  4. Hodder, Mark. "Sexton Blake Bibliography: 1917". Blakiana. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  5. Hodder, Mark. "Sexton Blake Bibliography: 1926". Blakiana. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  6. Wright, Norman (1989). "Introduction". The Sexton Blake Detective Library. Fleetway Publications. p. 11. ISBN 0-948248-96-3. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
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