Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Flames of Passion

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.2
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron6.2
6.2
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Directed by
  
Distributed by
  
Astra Film

Director
  
Cinematography
  
6.2/10
IMDb

Produced by
  
Initial release
  
November 1922

Producer
  
Flames of Passion wwwjazzageclubcomwpcontentuploads201508Fla

Written by
  
Herbert WilcoxM. V. Wilcox

Starring
  
Mae MarshC. Aubrey Smith

Productioncompany
  
Graham-Wilcox Productions

Cast
  
Mae Marsh, C. Aubrey Smith

Similar
  
The Paradise Virus, Dragons II: The Metal Ages, Try Me, The Rat, Invasion

Flames of passion pathman senathirajah


Flames of Passion (1922) was a British silent film drama directed by Graham Cutts, starred Mae Marsh and C. Aubrey Smith.

Contents

The film was made by the newly formed Graham-Wilcox Productions company, a joint venture between Cutts and producer Herbert Wilcox. The entrepreneurial Wilcox tempted American star Marsh to England with a high salary offer, believing this would improve the film's marketability in the U.S.

The gamble paid off as it became the first post-war British film to be sold to the U.S. The final reel of the film was filmed in the bi-pack color process Prizma Color.

A gay twist on brief encounter flames of passion 1989 extract


Plot

The wife of a wealthy barrister seduces her chauffeur, with whom she falls in love. She gives birth to a baby, apparently without her husband knowing anything about her pregnancy.

The child is killed by the chauffeur during a car accident—he was visibly drunk when driving. The result is a showpiece trial at the Old Bailey, presumably of the chauffeur on a charge of infanticide, in which the woman at first tries to protect her lover, but is forced finally under cross-examination to make a dramatic public confession that the dead infant was hers. By the end of the film, she returns to her husband.

Cast

  • Mae Marsh as Dorothy Hawke
  • C. Aubrey Smith as Richard Hawke, K.C.
  • Hilda Bayley as Kate Watson
  • Herbert Langley as Arthur Watson
  • Allan Aynesworth as Forbes
  • Eva Moore as Aunt
  • George K. Arthur as Friend
  • Henry Vibart as Lord Chief Justice
  • Reception

    Flames of Passion proved controversial with critics, many of whom found the subject matter lurid, sensationalist and distasteful. Cinemagoers had no such qualms, and turned the film into a big box-office hit.

    This was the first British film to be sold for distribution in the United States following World War I where it was shown under the title A Woman's Secret.

    Preservation status

    This is now considered a lost film.

    References

    Flames of Passion Wikipedia