The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1914 film)

The World, The Flesh and the Devil
Directed by F. Martin Thornton
Produced by Charles Urban
Written by Laurence Cowen
Starring Frank Esmond
Stella St. Audrie
Warwick Wellington
Distributed by Natural Colour Kinematograph (UK)
World Film Company (US)
Release date(s) 9 April 1914
Running time 50 min
Country United Kingdom
Language English

The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1914) was a British silent drama film, and was the world's first dramatic feature film to be photographed in color. The film, now considered a lost film, was made using the additive color Kinemacolor process.

Contents

Plot

The title comes from the Book of Common Prayer: "From all the deceits of the world, the flesh, and the devil, spare us, good Lord."

An intensely unhappy woman hatches a plot to switch the babies of a poor family and a rich family. But the nurse hired to pull off this transfer refuses to go through with it, leaving each baby with its proper family. When the babies are grown, the man from the poor family (who has been led to believe that he did come from the rich family) goes to the house of the other and throws him out. The remainder of the movie deals with the frustrations of mistaken identity.

Cast

See also

External links