The Man from Downing Street

The Man from Downing Street is a 1922 American silent adventure film directed by Edward José, starring Earle Williams and featuring Boris Karloff.[1] It is not known whether the film currently survives.[1]

The Man from Downing Street
Still with Earle Williams (disguised as a Rajah) and Betty Ross Clarke
Directed byEdward José
Written byLottie Horner
Bradley J. Smollen
Clyde Westover
Florine Williams
StarringEarle Williams
Charles Hill Mailes
CinematographyErnest F. Smith
Distributed byVitagraph Studios
Release date
  • April 2, 1922 (1922-04-02)
Running time
5 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[2] Captain Robert Kent (Williams) of the London secret service is assigned to Delhi to discover the person responsible for the passing out of government information from the British Commission in India. He is disguised as a Rajah and is the guest of Colonel Wentworth (Mailes), who has charge of the district. Wentworth is the only one who knows Kent's identity, and the two follow up on one clue after another as several person become implicated. Finally, only two men remain as the logical perpetrators of the deed. To catch the guilty party, Kent confides to the Colonel that he has issued instructions to the London office to send cables to each of the two suspects on two different matters of commercial importance with the idea being that the subsequent leak of information would reveal the guilty party. The plan works and guilt is attached to Captain Graves (Prior), whom Colonel Wentworth claims has started a rumor on the subject suggested in one of the cables. However, the fact that the Colonel has accused Captain Graves proves that the Colonel was the guilty party as Captain Kent announces that neither of the two cables had ever been sent. Trapped, the Colonel is forced to confess.

Cast

gollark: I believe this is O(n!), actually.
gollark: The performance is great too. It's not O(n²), it's an even more biggerer and thus superior order.
gollark: Of course.
gollark: I'm not entirely sure how, but it seems to construct a tree/maybe deterministic finite automaton/finite state machine/I don't know theoretical CS which matches anagrams and unmatches unanagrams.
gollark: ```pythonimport collectionsdef do_thing(s): if len(s) == 1: return { s[0]: True } out = {} for i, c in enumerate(s): without = s[:i] + s[i + 1:] things = do_thing(without) out[c] = things return outdef match(r, s): print(r) c = r for i, x in enumerate(s): print(x) try: c = c[x] if c == True: if i + 1 == len(s): return True # full match else: return False # characters remain except KeyError: return False # no match return False # incomplete matchentry = lambda a, b: match(do_thing(a.lower().replace(" ", "")), b.lower().replace(" ", ""))```Here is my entry (pending a port to osmarkslisp™️). This is definitely my entry.

See also

References

  1. "Progressive Silent Film List: The Man from Downing Street". Silent Era. Retrieved April 6, 2008.
  2. "Reviews: The Man from Downing Street". Exhibitors Herald. New York City: Exhibitors Herald Company. 14 (14): 57. April 1, 1922.
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