The Rotters
The Rotters is a 1921 British silent comedy film directed by A. V. Bramble and starring Joe Nightingale, Sydney Fairbrother and Sidney Paxton.[1] It was based on a play by H. F. Maltby.
The Rotters | |
---|---|
Directed by | A. V. Bramble |
Written by | H. F. Maltby (play) Arthur Q. Walton |
Starring | Joe Nightingale Sydney Fairbrother Sidney Paxton Roger Tréville |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Ideal Film Company |
Release date | 1921 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Plot
A headmistress recognises a married JP as her ex-lover and stops him from sentencing the Mayor's son.
Cast
- Joe Nightingale - Joe Barnes
- Sydney Fairbrother - Jemima Nivet
- Sidney Paxton - John Clugson MP
- Margery Meadows - Estelle Clugson
- Roger Tréville - Percy Clugson
- Ernest English - John Wait
- Cynthia Murtagh - Margaret Barnes
- Clare Greet - Mrs Clugson
- Stanley Holloway - Arthur Wait
- Margaret Shelley - Winnie Clugson
gollark: `greenery` can do the complement/inverse of regexes, at least.
gollark: Interesting question. Probably. I don't know how you could construct that.
gollark: I think that technically makes it not a *regular* regular expression.
gollark: My thing works by building a weirdly structured finite-state machine which matches permutations of "regex", then converting it to a different flat one usable by the `greenery` library, then using it to very slowly convert that into a regex.
gollark: I made a regex which matches all anagrams of regex: `e(e(g(rx|xr)|r(gx|xg)|x(gr|rg))|g(e(rx|xr)|r(ex|xe)|x(er|re))|r(e(gx|xg)|g(ex|xe)|x(eg|ge))|x(e(gr|rg)|g(er|re)|r(eg|ge)))|g(e(e(rx|xr)|r(ex|xe)|x(er|re))|r(e(ex|xe)|xe{2})|x(e(er|re)|re{2}))|r(e(e(gx|xg)|g(ex|xe)|x(eg|ge))|g(e(ex|xe)|xe{2})|x(e(eg|ge)|ge{2}))|x(e(e(gr|rg)|g(er|re)|r(eg|ge))|g(e(er|re)|re{2})|r(e(eg|ge)|ge{2}))`.
References
- "BFI | Film & TV Database | The ROTTERS (1921)". Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 16 April 2009. Archived from the original on 17 January 2009. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.