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A Self-Made Failure is a 1924 American silent comedy film distributed by Associated First National Pictures, later First National Pictures. It was directed by William Beaudine and starred silent comic Lloyd Hamilton and then child actor Ben Alexander. At the time it was released, it one of the longest comedy features ever made. [1] [2]
April 21 – Eleonora Duse, Italian veteran stage actress, who made one film in 1916 (born in 1858) August 9 – L. Rogers Lytton, American stage and screen actor (born in 1867) September 23 – Ben Deeley, film actor married to Barbara La Marr (born in 1878) October 12 – Kate Lester, English veteran stage and film actress (born in 1857)
Title Director Cast Genre Notes Babbitt: Harry Beaumont: Willard Louis, Mary Alden: Drama: Warner Bros. Baffled: J. P. McGowan: Franklyn Farnum, Alyce Mills: Western ...
He is blackmailed by one of his old drinking mates, Slick Harvey, who also tries to seduce Murnin's daughter, Mildred (Lorraine Esmond). Mildred's fiancé, Tom ( Gordon Collingridge ) exposes Harvey as the leader of a gang of opium smugglers and that it was he, not Murnin, who killed the man on Thursday Island.
September 15, 1924 Wine of Youth: September 29, 1924 His Hour: September 29, 1924 One Night in Rome: October 6, 1924 The Beauty Prize: Considered lost October 6, 1924 Circe, the Enchantress: Distribution only; produced by Tiffany Productions: October 13, 1924 The Navigator: Distribution only; presented by Joseph M. Schenck: October 20, 1924 The ...
Abraham Lincoln (1924 film short) Abraham Lincoln (1924 film) Ace of Cactus Range; The Adventures of Oktyabrina; Aelita; After a Million; After Love (1924 film) After the Ball (1924 film) Against All Odds (1924 film) The Age of Innocence (1924 film) The Air Hawk; The Alaskan; Alice's Day at Sea; Alice's Spooky Adventure; Alimony (1924 film) All ...
Norma Marie Talmadge [1] (May 2, 1894 – December 24, 1957) was an American actress and film producer of the silent era. A major box-office draw for more than a decade, her career reached a peak in the early 1920s, when she ranked among the most popular idols of the American screen.
The film took in $881,000, and made a profit of $349,000. [2] He Who Gets Slapped was released on DVD by Warner Home Video on November 30, 1999. Warner has re-released the film several times as a part of its 6-disc Warner Archive Collection, first on November 22, 2011 and later on June 23, 2015. [17]