Interference | |
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Directed by | Lothar Mendes, (silent version) Roy Pomery, (sound version) |
Written by | Roland Pertwee (play) Howard Dearden (play) Louise Long Hope Loring (adaptation) Ernest Pascal (dialogue) Julian Johnson (titles) |
Starring | William Powell Evelyn Brent |
Music by | W. Franke Harling |
Cinematography | Henry Gerrard Farciot Edouart J R. Hunt |
Editing by | George Nichols Jr. |
Studio | Paramount Pictures |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | November 5, 1928 |
Running time | 10 reels |
Country | United States |
Language | English Also silent version with English intertitles |
Interference is an early sound film drama released in 1928 and starring William Powell and Evelyn Brent. This was Paramount Pictures' first ever full talking movie. It was also simultaneously filmed as a silent. The film was based on the play Interference, a Play in Three Acts by Roland Pertwee and Howard Dearden. When a first husband turns out not to be dead, blackmail leads to murder.[1]
The silentera.com website has stage actress Ruth Chatterton and theatrical impresario Daniel Frohman as appearing in this film.
uncredited