The Honeymoon Express
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The Honeymoon Express | |
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Directed by | James Flood Ernst Lubitsch(uncredited) William Cannon(assistant) |
Written by | Mary O'Hara |
Starring | Willard Louis Irene Rich |
Cinematography | David Abel Willard Van Enger |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release dates | September 2, 1926 (limited release) |
Running time | 7 reels |
Country | US |
Languages | Silent (English titles) Vitaphone (music score only) |
The Honeymoon Express is a lost[1] 1926 silent film drama directed by James Flood and uncredited Ernst Lubitsch and starred Willard Louis and Irene Rich. Willard Louis's final film before his death.[2] It is unknown, but the film might have been released with a Vitaphone soundtrack.
Production
The film was based on a play titled The Doormat. It was directed by James Flood and the screenwriter was Mary O'Hara. The film was first released on August 9, 1926 by Warner Bros. Pictures. It was reported by The Film Daily on July 16, 1926 that Jack L. Warner was going to withdraw the film from being released, but it was later screened in September 1926 in New York City. The September 8, 1926 showing of the film in New York City was stated by Variety to be 64 minutes long, but it was reported by the magazine that an October 6, 1926 showing was 78 minutes long. The second reported length is more likely to be correct in comparison to its film reel length of 6,768 feet.
The book American Film Cycles: The Silent Era states that The Honeymoon Express is one of a few silent films that "reflected the decade's extended social tolerance of premarital and and extramarital sex, and emphasized that these new freedoms brought additional responsibilites."
Cast
- Willard Louis as John Lambert
- Irene Rich as Mary Lambert
- Holmes Herbert as Jim Donaldson
- Helene Costello as Margaret Lambert
- John Patrick as Nathan Peck
- Jane Winton as Estelle
- Virginia Lee Corbin as Becky
- Harold Goodwin as Lance
- Robert Brower as Dick Donaldson
References
External links
- The Honeymoon Express @ IMDb.com
- synopsis at AllMovie
- lobby card with Irene Rich, Virginia Lee Corbin