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My Own United States

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Distributed by
  
Metro Pictures

Genres
  
Drama, Silent film

Writer
  
Anthony Paul Kelly

Director
  
John W. Noble

Cast
  
Arnold Daly

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

My Own United States My Own United States J W Myers on Columbia cylinder 32055 issued

Language
  
Silent (English intertitles)

Release date
  
April 7, 1918

People also search for
  
Romeo and Juliet, The Birth of a Race, A Million A Minute, The Three of Us, A Magdalene of the Hills

My Own United States is a 1918 American silent drama film directed by John W. Noble and starring Arnold Daly, Charles Graham, and Duncan McRae. It is based on the short story The Man Without a Country by Edward Everett Hale. It was distributed by Metro Pictures

Contents

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The original story, with its strong patriotic theme, was written during the American Civil War in order to increase public support for the Union cause; the film had a like function with regard to World War I, in which the United States was deeply involved at the time.

Plot

As described in a film magazine, Philip Noloan (Daly) is a young American who entertains pacifist views about the American entry into World War I because of his selfish desire to maintain his own comfort. His father, to arouse his duty to his country, tells him the tragic story of his ancestor the first Philip Nolan"s (Daly) treason by relating the incidents from the story The Man Without a Country. His father then tells of incidents from the American Civil War where a later ancestor, also named Philip Nolan (Daly), did all he could to wipe the stain of that treason from the family name. At the conclusion, Philip has become so thrilled by the great deeds of his family that he rises to the occasion and offers his services to his country to make the world safe for democracy.

Reception

Like many American films of the time, My Own United States was subject to cuts by city and state film censorship boards. For example, the Chicago Board of Censors cut, in Reel 3, the shooting in the duel and changed the Lincoln quotation to read "Let us have faith that Right makes Might".

References

My Own United States Wikipedia
My Own United States IMDb