A Desert Wooing | |
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![]() DVD cover (2012) | |
Directed by | Jerome Storm |
Screenplay by | J.G. Hawks |
Produced by | Thomas H. Ince |
Starring | Enid Bennett Jack Holt Donald MacDonald J. P. Lockney Charles Spere |
Cinematography | Edwin W. Willat |
Production company | Thomas H. Ince Corporation |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 50 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
A Desert Wooing is a 1918 American drama silent film directed by Jerome Storm and written by J.G. Hawks. The film stars Enid Bennett, Jack Holt, Donald MacDonald, J. P. Lockney and Charles Spere. The film was released on June 23, 1918, by Paramount Pictures. [1] [2] The film has been preserved and was released on DVD format in 2012. [3] It was the screen debut of actress Irene Rich in an uncredited role.
Avice, daughter of a decadent rich family, realizes that her mother has put her on the marriage market and resigns herself to her fate. So she marries Masters, a rich westerner, still believing herself in love with Dr. Van Fleet, one of society's lounge lizards. He is a member of the party which Masters invites to his ranch house after the wedding. One night he breaks into Avice's room but much to his surprise she repulses him. He is roundly beaten up by Masters, is driven off the ranch and takes refuge with a Mexican. After the departure of the rest of the guests, Masters sets himself to the task of crushing the proud spirit of Avice but with little success. His best friend, Keno Clark and Avice's brother, thinking to assist in the happy ending, try to arouse Avice's jealousy by hinting of another woman in the life of Masters. This however, fails to have the desired effect, for Avice announces her intention of returning East and never setting eyes on her husband again. Van Fleet, the villain, in revenge, shoots Masters, wounding him severely and then Avice awakens to her real state of mind. At the point of a gun she forces the doctor to dress her husband's wound and when he recovers there is complete happiness. [4]
The Exhibitors Herald was positive in their review, complimenting the photography as "exceptional" and the settings as "excellent". They went on to praise Bennett's performance as "all that could be desired in the leading role. Her pretty mannerisms cannot fail to captivate. There are a number of good bits of humor in the piece which get across well". [5] A reviewer for Photoplay Magazine said that Bennett "plays the wife with much speed and prettiness, though her method of handling a gun would hardly do in France", and noted that Holt "is a handsome hero for a change, and takes kindly to the work. It is a lively production, slightly tinged with suggestiveness at the outset". [6] Edward Weitzel praised Bennett's performance in The Moving Picture World , saying her "part was much stronger than any she has yet played" and also singled out cameraman Edwin Willat's work, saying "scenically the production has many moments of beauty". [7]
The Exhibitors Herald (1918) reported that the Chicago Board of Censors had cut out several scenes from the film, including: subtitles that said "You may be mad - but you must pay", two choking scenes, a close-up of a man looking at a woman through a window, and all scenes in the bed up to the time she appears with her robe on, after the man enters the room. [8]
Charles John Holt, Jr. was an American motion picture actor who was prominent in both silent and sound movies, particularly Westerns.
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