The Right of Way (1920 film)

Starring Bert Lytell, The Right of Way is a lost[2] 1920 American remade silent film directed by John Francis Dillon and distributed by Metro Pictures.[3][4] The film was previously filmed in 1915 and released on February 29, 1920 in the United States.

The Right of Way
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Directed byJohn Francis Dillon
Produced byMaxwell Karger
Written byJune Mathis
Based onThe Right of Way
by Sir Gilbert Parker[1]
StarringBert Lytell
Leatrice Joy
CinematographyRobert Kurrle
Sol Polito
Distributed byMetro Pictures
Release date
  • February 29, 1920 (1920-02-29)
Running time
70 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)
still of a scene.

Cast

gollark: Good enough for what? And again, god is omnipotent; it is entirely possible to know the answer without actually creating a world and having people do things and then *torturing them* because they were unlucky enough to get a bad environment.
gollark: What is being tested? *Why*?
gollark: Oh, and cancer. Why do we get cancer? Whales don't get cancer.
gollark: An omnipotent engineer-god could just not do that.
gollark: There's the entire thing with the appendix, our eyes are *backward* (light sensing bit below the nerves carrying data out), some nerves and such are routed inefficiently.

References

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