Broken Laws

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Broken Laws
Directed by Roy William Neill
Produced by Dorothy Davenport
Written by Adela Rogers St. Johns (original story)
Studio Thomas Ince Corp.
Distributed by Film Booking Office of America
Release dates 9 November 1924
Running time 70 min.
Country United States
Language English

Broken Laws (1924) is an American silent dramatic film directed by Roy William Neill, remarkable for the appearance of Dorothy Davenport, who is billed as "Mrs. Wallace Reid".

Davenport plays a loving mother who can't help indulging her son Bobby, spoiling him to the point where he is an irresponsible "jazz-mad" teenager on trial for vehicular manslaughter. She wakes up with a start at the end of the trial, with new resolve to provide the right amount of parental discipline.

Davenport's husband was the star Wallace Reid, who died of morphine addiction in January 1923. By June 1923, Davenport had co-produced, starred in and toured the country with Human Wreckage, a moralistic warning about the terrors of drug addiction. Its sensational tone, and the roadshow engagement with her personal appearances, were a direct precursor to the later 1930s exploitation films of Kroger Babb and others.

Broken Laws on the topic of parental overindulgence is the second of Davenport's "social conscience" releases, along with The Red Kimona (1925), based on a true-life story of white slavery.[1]

Cast

  • Dorothy Davenport as Joan Allen (as Mrs. Wallace Reid)
  • Percy Marmont as Richard Heath
  • Ramsey Wallace as Ralph Allen
  • Jackie Saunders as Muriel Heath (as Jacqueline Saunders)
  • Arthur Rankin as Bobby Allen at 16
  • Virginia Lee Corbin as Patsy Heath at age 16
  • Pat Moore as Bobby Allen at age 8
  • Jane Walsh as Patsy Heath at age 8
  • Tommy Hicks as Fat kid
  • Henry Neill as Himself
  • Dorothy Seay as Child (unbilled)

See also

References

  1. Guide to the silent years of American cinema, by Donald W. McCaffrey, Christopher P. Jacobs, page 101

External links

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