The Hope (1920 film)

The Hope
Directed by Herbert Blache
Produced by Maxwell Karger
Written by Albert S. Le Vino (scenario)
Based on The Hope
by Henry Hamilton and Cecil Raleigh
Starring Jack Mulhall
Marguerite De La Motte
Distributed by Metro Pictures
Release dates
  • September 7, 1920 (1920-09-07)
Running time
6 reels
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

The Hope is a surviving 1920 American silent comedy film directed by Herbert Blache and starring Jack Mulhall, Marguerite De La Motte, and Ruth Stonehouse. It was produced and distributed by the Metro Pictures company.[1]

Plot

As described in a film magazine,[2] blackguard usurer Michael Waltburn (Grimwood), assuming for business purposes the name of Milton Dudley, keeps his daughter Olive (Stonehouse) in ignorance of his profession. He arranges with the Duchess of Remington (Kelso) to sponsor Olive socially, and in return he will not enforce payment of a debt owed to him. At the home of Harold, Lord Ingestre (Mulhall), fiance of Lady Brenda Carylon (De La Motte), Olive meets social rake Hector Grant (Elliott). Hector knows Olive's identity and threatens her father with disclosure unless he is reimbursed with loans. The quartet meet again in India where the two men are in the King's Rifles. Hector deceives Olive into a secret marriage and then refuses to acknowledge her as his wife and drives her from him with revealing her father's secret. Hector then resumes his siege for the heart of Lady Brenda, who previously had spurned his affections, and leads her to believe that Harold is the husband of Olive. Searching for her to discover the real truth, Harold finds Olive in Italy. An earthquake associated with a volcanic eruption in Italy kills Hector while on the way to make reparation, and Lady Brenda learns the real situation.

Cast

Preservation status

A print is preserved from the MGM by George Eastman House.[3]

References

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