The City of Youth
The City of Youth is a 1928 British silent drama film directed by E. H. Calvert and starring Betty Faire, Lilian Oldland and J. Fisher White.[1]
The City of Youth | |
---|---|
Directed by | E. H. Calvert |
Written by | Muriel Alleyne Oona Ball (novel) |
Starring | Betty Faire Lilian Oldland J. Fisher White |
Production company | British University Films |
Distributed by | British University Films |
Release date | March 1928 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | Silent English intertitles |
Cast
- Betty Faire as Barbara
- Lilian Oldland as Brownie
- J. Fisher White as Patrick Enderby
- Desmond Roberts
gollark: I am talking meta-level here; I'm not saying "culling is unhelpful" but "it doesn't actually help anything to try and shove things into the culling box".
gollark: It might not be *technically wrong* by a strict definition to say that trying to improve health standards and whatever to reduce population growth is culling, but it's not... helpful? As in, it doesn't really matter whether the relevant actions fit into [bad and emotionally charged category], but whether they're actually bad.
gollark: "Culling" is generally meant to mean something more like actively going out and killing people.
gollark: It probably comes out net-positive, if they vaccinated a lot of people and didn't have too many issues.
gollark: I am trying to think of a not very politically charged example. This is hard.
References
- Wood p.65
Bibliography
- Wood, Linda. British Films, 1927-1939. British Film Institute, 1986.
External links
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