Two Can Play | |
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Directed by | Nat Ross |
Written by | Reginald Fogwell |
Based on | Two Can Play by Gerald Mygatt |
Starring | |
Cinematography | André Barlatier |
Edited by | Gene Milford |
Production company | Encore Pictures |
Distributed by | Associated Exhibitors |
Release date |
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Running time | 6 reels |
Country | United States |
Languages |
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Two Can Play is a 1926 American silent drama film directed by Nat Ross and starring George Fawcett, Allan Forrest, and Clara Bow. [1] [2]
As described in a film magazine review, [3] Dorothy Hammis, a young woman who is in love with James Radley, a high living but worthy young man, learns that her wealthy financier father objects to their engagement and says that he favors another one for whom the woman does not care. Secretly, the father has hired Robert MacForth, a former pilot, to assist in ending the engagement by discrediting James. To win her from the man he dislikes, the father sends both men and his daughter on an airplane trip but gives instructions to the man he favors to pretend a wreck of the machine. The airplane is really wrecked and the pilot proves to be cowardly. When the father learns what has happened, he alters his opinion of James, the man he previously thought unworthy.
With no prints of Two Can Play located in any film archives, [4] it is a lost film.
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