Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Wanderer of the Wasteland (1924 film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Music director
  
Paul Sawtell

Duration
  

Director
  
Irvin Willat

Screenplay
  
Norman Houston

Country
  
United States

Wanderer of the Wasteland (1924 film) movie scenes WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND is especially interesting as it provides a back story for Chito Chito s parents Papa and Mama Rafferty Harry D Brown and


Language
  
Silent English intertitles

Release date
  
June 21, 1924 (1924-06-21) (USA)

Based on
  
Wanderer of the Wasteland  by Zane Grey

Directors
  
Wallace Grissell, Edward Killy

Cast
  
Audrey Long
(Jeanie Collinshaw),
James Warren
(Adam Larey),
Richard Martin
(Chito Jose Gonzalez Bustamante Rafferty),
Robert Barrat
(Uncle Jim Collinshaw),
Robert Clarke
(Jay Collinshaw)

Similar movies
  
Zane Grey wrote the story for Wanderer of the Wasteland and Sunset Pass

Wanderer of the Wasteland is a 1924 American color silent Western film directed by Irvin Willat and starring Jack Holt, Noah Beery, and Billie Dove. This was the third feature film to be photographed entirely in Technicolor.

Contents

Wanderer of the Wasteland (1924 film) NitrateVillecom View topic WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND 1924 in

Plot

The film is based on Zane Grey's 1923 novel of two brothers, one an honest cowpoke, the other a gambler. When Adam Larey (Jack Holt) confronts his younger brother Guerd (James Mason) about his gambling addiction, the latter is accidentally shot. A distraught Adam, believing he has killed his own brother, flees into the desert. He later learns that Guerd was merely wounded and returns to the loving arms of beautiful Billie Dove.

Production background

Paramount Pictures decided to make a picture entirely in Technicolor following the success of the Technicolor sequences in the film The Ten Commandments (1923) and director Irvin Willat's own Heritage of the Desert (1924).

Preservation status

The film is now considered to be a lost film. An original cemented Technicolor print survived into the 1960s in the hands of the film's director, Irvin Willat, who reported in 1971 that the 35 mm nitrate film had decomposed and turned into jelly.

After Willat's death, his daughter mentioned that she remembered the day when he discovered that Wanderer of the Wasteland had decomposed. She said he went upstairs to his bedroom, closed the door and cried for three hours. His former wife Billie Dove starred in the picture, and he had never really come to terms with their separation. Dove was lured away from Willat by Howard Hughes, who essentially purchased her away from him.

References

Wanderer of the Wasteland (1924 film) Wikipedia