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The Fighting Coward | |
---|---|
Directed by | James Cruze |
Written by | Walter Woods (scenario) |
Based on | Magnolia by Booth Tarkington |
Produced by | Adolph Zukor Jesse Lasky |
Starring | Ernest Torrence Mary Astor Noah Beery, Sr. Cullen Landis |
Cinematography | Karl Brown |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 7 reels (6,501 feet) |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Fighting Coward is a 1924 American silent comedy film produced by Famous Players–Lasky, released by Paramount Pictures, and directed by James Cruze. The film stars Ernest Torrence, Mary Astor, Noah Beery, Sr., Phyllis Haver, and Cullen Landis.[1] The film is based on the play Magnolia by Booth Tarkington, from 1904.[2]
As described in a film magazine review,[3] prior to the American Civil War, Tom Rumford, Southern born but reared by Philadelphia relatives, returns to Mississippi when 21 years old and becomes engaged to his cousin Elvira. Unused to the stern traditions of the Southern code of honor, he is driven from home in disgrace, stigmatized as being a coward, and loses his sweetheart's love when he refuses a challenge to fight a duel. Later, he meets General Orlando Jackson, a famous gunfighter. Jackson develops the young man into a dangerous shot and fighting man under the name Colonel Blake. With his honor cleared, he returns to his Mississippi home and visits his folks, who now bow down to him, and he weds Elvira's younger sister Lucy.
Copies of The Fighting Coward survive in the Library of Congress, George Eastman House, and in the Gosfilmofond archive in Moscow.[4]