The Barbarian (1920 film)
5.6 /10 1 Votes
Director Donald Crisp Genre Drama Duration | 5.6/10 IMDb Produced by Monroe Salisbury Country United States | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Language Silent (English intertitles) Release date September 1920 Based on Theodore Seixas Solomons short story
The Barbarian Writer Theodore Seixas Solomons (story), E.P. Heath, Milton Markwell Cast Jane Novak , J Barney Sherry , George Berrell , Monroe Salisbury Similar movies How Green Was My Valley (1941), The Navigator (1924), The Women (2008), Smilin Through (1932), That Girl from Paris (1936) |
The Barbarian is a 1920 American silent drama film directed by Donald Crisp and starring Monroe Salisbury and George Berrell. It is based upon a short story by Theodore Seixas Solomons.
Contents
Plot
As described in a film magazine, Eric (Salisbury) is brought up in the Canadian north woods by his reclusive father Elliott Straive (Berrell), who was a college professor. The boy supplements his immense knowledge of nature with book learning of society and polite customs. A party of ultra-rich people led by James Heatherton (Sherry) arrive and camp on the land, building a tent city for their luxurious convenience. Their object is to obtain possession of the land by means fair or foul. Eric frustrates their plans but falls in love with Floria (Novak), the daughter of the land grabber. The failure of the rich to embarrass Eric using sham etiquette is humorous, and there is a fight between Eric and Mark Brant (Hale), a man from the party who comes closest to being a "heavy" of the film.
Cast
Production
Much of The Barbarian was filmed in California's Castle Lake district with Mount Shasta in the background.
References
The Barbarian (1920 film) WikipediaThe Barbarian (1920 film) IMDb