The Woman Juror

The Woman Juror is a 1926 British silent era drama film directed by Milton Rosmer and starring Charles Ashton,[1] Alexander Field and Frank Vosper.[2] It was adapted from a play of the same name by E.F. Parr.[3]

Cast

gollark: It would be more than "oh no, I have slightly worse food choices".
gollark: Full anarchoprimitivism, as komrad suggested, would *not* have that, and pre-industrial-revolution you have way worse productive capacity (so less of those things/worse things), and no access to modern medicine.
gollark: You still have access to presumably clean water of some form, the knowledge that you *can* go somewhere with that if you need medical treatment or whatever, and the ability to buy stuff if it's needed.
gollark: Or, I guess, for full monke™ any technology.
gollark: I feel like you're drastically underestimating how bad life is without any modern technology.

References

  1. BFI.org
  2. "The Woman Juror". 1 December 1926 via IMDb.
  3. Goble, Alan (1 January 1999). "The Complete Index to Literary Sources in Film". Walter de Gruyter via Google Books.


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