The Sixth Commandment
The Sixth Commandment is a lost[1] 1924 silent film drama directed by Christy Cabanne and starring William Faversham.[2]
The Sixth Commandment | |
---|---|
Directed by | Christy Cabanne |
Produced by | Christy Cabanne |
Written by | Arthur Hoerl(story) Merritt Crawford(title cards) |
Starring | William Faversham Charlotte Walker |
Cinematography | Philip Armand William H. Tuers |
Edited by | Merritt Crawford |
Distributed by | Associated Exhibitors |
Release date | June 1, 1924 |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Country | USA |
Language | Silent..English titles |
Plot
John Brant, a devoted minister, is in love with Marian Calhoun, but must keep it a secret because she is engaged to Robert Fields--who, unknown to Marian, is playing around with a variety of different women. Marian finds out and breaks the engagement.
Cast
- William Faversham - David Brant
- Charlotte Walker - Mrs. Calhoun
- John Boles - John Brandt
- Kathleen Martyn - Marion Calhoun
- Neil Hamilton - Robert Fields
- Coit Albertson - Dr. Carvel
- Sara Wood - Florence Page
- Consuelo Flowerton - Helen Brooks
- Charles Emmett Mack - Henry Adams
- Edmund Breese - Colonel Saunders
- Anita Louise - (unbilled as Anita Fremault)
gollark: I'm sure a few people will, but not very many as long as they can retain a vaguely familiar environment and forget about the cost to them eventually.
gollark: Unlikely. Almost nobody actually cares.
gollark: The slow death of general-purpose computing evidently continues.
gollark: They *also* require secure boot? Um. This is increasingly beelike.
gollark: Probably increasingly accursed DRM.
References
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