Silent Era Information*Progressive Silent Film List*Lost Films*People*Theatres
Taylorology*Articles*Home Video*Books*Search
 
Foolish Wives BD
 
Silent Era Home Page  >  PSFL  >  The High Hand (1915)
 
Progressive Silent Film List
A growing source of silent era film information.
This listing is from The Progressive Silent Film List by Carl Bennett.
Copyright © 1999-2024 by Carl Bennett and the Silent Era Company.
All Rights Reserved.
About This Listing

Report Omissions or Errors
in This Listing

 
 
  Carlyle Blackwell and Neva Gerber.
Photograph: Silent Era image collection.
 
 
The High Hand
(1915) United States of America
B&W : Six reels
Directed by William D. Taylor (William Desmond Taylor)

Cast: Carlyle Blackwell [Jim Warren], Neva Gerber [Edna Tillinghast], William Brunton [Big Tom Simmonds], Douglas Gerard [Francis Everard Lewis], John Sheehan [Franques], Henry Kernan [Dwight Tillinghast], Richard Willis [the shop foreman]

Favorite Players Film Company production; distributed by Alliance Films Corporation. / Scenario by Richard Willis, from the novel The High Hand by Jacques Futrelle. / Released March 1915. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format.

Drama.

Synopsis: [?] [From The Moving Picture World]? Up through the din and murk of the steel works, up by brawn and brain until he took his place behind the superintendent’s desk came Jim Warren, but his heart was still with the strugglers in the glare of the furnaces. Here he had time to think and here he conceived the “big idea.” The “big idea” required an established political position and he started out to get it. Francques, the henchman of Lewis, the political boss, saw in the young reformer a tool through which he could treacherously ruin his superior. Warren was running for the legislature as well as Lewis, and fortified with incriminating evidence against his opponent supplied by Francques, Warren entered the field as an independent candidate and was elected. Lewis took his defeat calmly and made friendly overtures to the newly elected member. Through the influence of Lewis, Warren was invited to visit the speaker of the House, Mr. Tillinghast. Here he was introduced to the girl of his life; the girl he had first seen, as a curious child visitor at the steel works. Several other times fate brought them together. It had been a secret love and he was astounded when he learned from her own lips that she was engaged to marry Lewis. Lewis’s wedding to Edna was to occur as soon as Tillinghast was elected governor of the state. Edna admired Lewis and thought she loved him until one day after a talk with Jim Warren she realized the sordid contrast to which she, her father, and Lewis were parties. She told her father that she would not marry Lewis and remained firm in her decision against every argument that her ambitious parent offered. From that moment Warren battled for two loves, the love of a woman and the love of truth. Lewis, behind a smiling face, plotted Warren’s undoing. Bribes came from every source. Marked bills, stocks and bonds were lavished by the clique upon the supposed unsuspecting assemblyman. At last they thought the trap ready to spring. He was arrested. He trembled not but unafraid played the last card of his high hand. He calmly led his captors to the vaults of the National Bank and there neatly docketed each in its separate envelope under seal of the bank were the bribes untouched together with the names of the givers and evidence that sent many of them to prison cells. The newspapers went wild. Jim Warren played the game and he was the man of the hour. Weeks later when the state convention had just gone wild over the nomination of Warren for governor, he and Edna were talking. “I think,” said Edna, “that as long as I can’t be the daughter of the governor, that I will be far happier as the governor’s wife.” // Additional synopsis available in AFI-F1 n. F1.1953.

Survival status: (unknown)

Current rights holder: Public domain [USA].

Keywords: USA: California: Los Angeles - USA: California: Sacramento

Listing updated: 10 November 2022.

References: AFI-F1 n. F1.1953; Lahue-Gentlemen p. 38 : Website-IMDb.

 
Silent Era Home Page  >  PSFL  >  The High Hand (1915)
 
Become a Patron of Silent Era

LINKS IN THIS COLUMN
WILL TAKE YOU TO
EXTERNAL WEBSITES

SUPPORT SILENT ERA
USING THESE LINKS
WHEN SHOPPING AT
AMAZON

AmazonUS
AmazonCA
AmazonUK

Floating Weeds BD

Vitagraph BD

Road to Ruin BD

Cat and the Canary BD

Accidentally Preserved Vol 5 BD

Boob / Why Be Good BD

Madame DuBarry BD

Stella Maris BD

Three Ages / Hospitality BD

Pandora's Box BD

Johannna Enlists BD