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The Border Legion (1924 film)

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Directed by
  
William K. Howard

Cinematography
  
Alvin Wyckoff

Director
  
William K. Howard

Story by
  
Zane Grey

Written by
  
George C. Hull

Initial release
  
22 August 1924 (Portugal)

Screenplay
  
George C. Hull

Production company
  
Famous Players-Lasky

The Border Legion (1924 film) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb8

Produced by
  
Adolph Zukor Jesse L. Lasky

Based on
  
The Border Legion by Zane Grey

Starring
  
Antonio Moreno Helene Chadwick

Cast
  
Antonio Moreno, Helene Chadwick, Charles Stanton Ogle, Eddie Gribbon, Gibson Gowland

Similar
  
Code of the West, Volcano!, The Thundering Herd, Gigolo, Christina

The Border Legion is a lost 1924 American Western silent film directed by William K. Howard and starring Antonio Moreno and Helene Chadwick. Written by George C. Hull and based on the 1916 novel The Border Legion by Zane Grey, the film is about a cowboy who is wrongly accused of murder and is rescued by the leader of a band of Idaho outlaws known as the Border Legion. When the outlaws kidnap a young woman, the cowboy knows that he must help the woman escape. The film premiered on October 19, 1924 in New York City and was released in the United States on November 24, 1924 by Paramount Pictures.

Contents

Plot

After Joan Randle (Helene Chadwick) accuses her fiancé Jim Cleve (Antonio Moreno) of being worthless, Jim travels to Idaho where he is wrongly accused of murder. He is rescued by Kells (Rockliffe Fellowes), the leader of a band of outlaws known as the Border Legion. Jim decides to join the outlaw band.

Meanwhile, Joan regrets how she treated her former sweetheart and follows him out West, where she is captured by Kells and is forced to shoot him in self-defense. In the coming days, Joan nurses Kells back to health, and the grateful outlaw soon falls in love with her. During a mining camp raid, Jim and Joan manage to escape, but while traveling by stagecoach, the legion catches up to them, Jim is shot and left for dead, and Joan is taken captive.

At the hideout, Kells and Gulden (Gibson Gowland) cut cards to see who ends up with Joan and the gold from the recent raid. Gulden wins the cut, but just then an injured Jim arrives and tries to save Joan from her dastardly captors. During the struggle, Kells and Gulden draw guns on each other, and both are killed in the exchange. Jim and Joan are reunited.

Cast

  • Antonio Moreno as Jim Cleve
  • Helene Chadwick as Joan Randle
  • Rockliffe Fellowes as Kells
  • Gibson Gowland as Gulden
  • Charles Ogle as Harvey Roberts
  • Jim Corey as Pearce
  • Eddie Gribbon as Blicky
  • Luke Cosgrave as Bill Randle
  • Critical response

    The Border Legion received a mixed review in Variety magazine.

    An out-and-out Western produced with a great deal of care and with a good cast, made from one of the most famous Grey novels and yet it doesn't sum up as anything great. The reason for that may be the age of the plot, for from the beginning to the end there is never a doubt as to its outcome.

    Adaptations

    The 1916 novel The Border Legion by Zane Grey was first adapted to film in 1918 with The Border Legion, directed by T. Hayes Hunter and starring Blanche Bates, Hobart Bosworth, and Eugene Strong. This 1924 adaptation directed by William K. Howard and starring Antonio Moreno and Helene Chadwick was the second silent film version produced by Paramount Pictures. Paramount would produce two more adaptations. In 1930, the first sound film adaptation was directed by Otto Brower and Edwin H. Knopf, The Border Legion, starring Jack Holt and Fay Wray. Finally in 1934, The Last Round-Up was released, directed by Henry Hathaway and starring Randolph Scott and Barbara Fritchie.

    References

    The Border Legion (1924 film) Wikipedia


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