Volume II: Filmography
(Falstaff)
(Mutual Program)
August 27, 1916 (Sunday)
Length: 1 reel
Character: Comedy
Notes: 1. This was a left-over film, released on the Mutual Program, and made before Thanhouser was affiliated with the Pathé Exchange, Inc. 2. The title appeared as A Swiss Sea Dog in some notices.
SYNOPSIS, The Moving Picture World, September 16, 1916:
"The girl was the only support of her widowed mother. At this point the villain made his appearance. He learned of her wealth and called in the guise of an admiral of the Swiss Navy. She and her fiancé quarreled about the Swiss Sea Dog. The girl had a chair, presented to her late father by his grateful shipmates, and the villain decides to surprise her with a picture of it. While the girl was out horseback riding the villain slipped into her home and took a snapshot of the famous chair. Unfortunately, the fiancée arrived and there was a fight. The girl's mother helped the trouble along by sending the camera and its contents to be developed. The messenger took the same car as the villain. A few blocks later on, two pretty girls got aboard. The car gave a jolt. One girl sat in the villain's lap; the other sat on the bulb of the camera. The picture showed the Swiss Sea Dog seated in father's chair, the handsome young woman on his lap. The villain tried to explain but the girl drove him from her."
REVIEW, The Moving Picture World, September 2, 1916:
"A burlesque comedy number in which a girl stenographer inherits a fortune. Rivalry for her hand furnishes the principal action. The riding scenes are best, though the humor only becomes fairly strong."
Note: "Only fairly strong," a term used repeatedly in reviews published in The Moving Picture World, seems to be a roundabout way of stating that a given aspect of a film is below average!
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Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.