The Rocky Road
The Rocky Road is a 1910 American short silent drama film directed by D. W. Griffith and starring Frank Powell. Prints of the film survive in the film archives of the Library of Congress and the Museum of Modern Art.[1]
The Rocky Road | |
---|---|
Directed by | D. W. Griffith |
Written by | D. W. Griffith |
Starring | Frank Powell |
Cinematography | G. W. Bitzer Arthur Marvin |
Distributed by | Biograph Company |
Release date |
|
Running time | 11 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent |
Cast
- Frank Powell as Ben
- Stephanie Longfellow as Ben's Wife
- George Nichols as The Farmer
- Linda Arvidson
- Kate Bruce as The Maid
- Charles Craig as A Farmhand / At Church
- Adele DeGarde
- Gladys Egan as At Church
- Frank Evans as In Bar
- Edith Haldeman as The Daughter, as a Child
- James Kirkwood as The Best Man
- Henry Lehrman as Outside Bar
- Marion Leonard
- Wilfred Lucas
- W. Chrystie Miller as The Minister
- Owen Moore
- Anthony O'Sullivan as In Bar
- Harry Solter
- Blanche Sweet as The Daughter, at Eighteen
- J. Waltham as In Bar
- Dorothy West as At Church (unconfirmed)
gollark: Over long enough timescales it's possible. Nothing else works because all power things ever require scarce input.
gollark: Just get more?
gollark: Nuclear fission will certainly not work *literally forever* or even millions of years, but it doesn't have to.
gollark: If I say my reactor is made of 2 tonnes of uranium it's preloaded with, how is that better than that being supplied as fuel?
gollark: The relevant metric is scarce inputs per joule, or something.
References
- "Silent Era: The Rocky Road". silentera. Retrieved July 2, 2008.
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