The Forgotten Law

The Forgotten Law is a 1922 American silent melodrama film starring Milton Sills and directed by James W. Horne. The story was adapted from the 1906 novel A Modern Madonna by Caroline Abbot Stanley.[1]

The Forgotten Law
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Directed byJames W. Horne
Produced byMax Graf
Written byJoseph Franklin Poland
Based onA Modern Madonna
by Caroline Abbot Stanley
StarringMilton Sills
CinematographyJohn Stumar
Production
company
Graf Productions
Distributed byMetro Pictures Corporation
Release date
  • November 20, 1922 (1922-11-20) (US)
Running time
7 reels
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

It is not known whether the film currently survives.[2][3]

Cast

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gollark: Regarding objective morality: I don't understand how it's meant to work. Generally we consider things "true" if they're well-established by experiment and observation. I do not see how you can empirically test whether something is what you "should" do.
gollark: A kilobee is 1000 bees.
gollark: Not really. I meant that the arguments roger was making skip a lot of steps through equivocation things.
gollark: It is about 3 kilobees that people argue for "god", the complex agenty human-like being from their religion, by arguing for "god", the could-be-basically-anything-ever necessary first cause and such.

References

  1. "The Forgotten Law". Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute.
  2. Carl Bennett, ed. (May 2, 2012). "The Forgotten Law (1922)". Progressive Silent Film List via Silent Era.
  3. "The Forgotten Law". Performing Arts Encyclopedia. Library of Congress. March 7, 2016.


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