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1924 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vanity's Price is a lost[1] 1924 American silent drama film directed by Roy William Neill and starring Anna Q. Nilsson. It was produced by the Gothic Productions company and released by FBO.[2][3]
Vanity's Price | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roy William Neill Josef von Sternberg (ass't director) |
Written by | Paul Bern (story, scenario) |
Produced by | Gothic Productions |
Starring | Anna Q. Nilsson |
Cinematography | Hal Mohr |
Production company | Gothic Productions |
Distributed by | Film Booking Offices of America |
Release date |
|
Running time | 60 minutes; 6 reels |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
The film is notable as the feature that brought assistant director Josef von Sternberg to the attention of critics for his handling of two sequences in the film.[4]
Von Sternberg, in his 1965 autobiography recalls:
Two incidents had been left out of the supposedly completed Vanity’s Price, which the director [Roy William Neill] had not considered worthwhile doing, and the studio [FBO] head now pleaded with me to direct those short episodes.”[5] One of the scenes concerned a young couple on a park bench, in love. The other involved a surgery in which a woman is operated in a therapeutic procedure related to the "Monkey gland" theory of Serge Voronoff.
Von Sternberg writes:
I gave orders to build an operating theatre with a deep pit and circular rows of seats rising steeply above the other to make it look like a cockfight arena. I planned to have the student physicians watch the surgery through binoculars with an occasional ironic grin.[6][7]
When the picture was previewed this sequence was praised by critics and von Sternberg was offered a position as director at FBO studios, but he turned it down to make an independently financed film, The Salvation Hunters (1925).[8][9][10]
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