Shore Leave (film)

Shore Leave is a 1925 American silent comedy film directed by John S. Robertson and starring Richard Barthelmess and Dorothy Mackaill. It was produced by Barthelmess's production company, Inspiration, and released by First National Pictures. A print of the film survives.[1]

Shore Leave
Lobby card
Directed byJohn S. Robertson
Produced byRichard Barthelmess
Written byJosephine Lovett
Agnes Smith (titles)
Based onShore Leave
by Hubert Osborne
CinematographyRoy Overbaugh
Stewart Nelson
Edited byWilliam Hamilton
Distributed byFirst National Pictures
Release date
  • September 6, 1925 (1925-09-06) (United States)
Running time
7 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Shore Leave is based on the stage play of the same name written by Hubert Osborne. The play ran on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre from August 8 to December 1922 for a total of 151 performances. The play starred James Rennie and Frances Starr in the leads played by Barthelmess and Mackaill in the film.[2]

Cast

gollark: It was trained on some large subset of the internet, and can apparently actually write code a bit.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPT-3
gollark: Maybe with even more money they could run it really fast on ASICs instead of GPUs.
gollark: GPT-3 apparently already reaches "plausibly human-written if you're not concentrating much", and apparently the architecture scales quite nicely.
gollark: Rust is a neat language.

References


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