The Sea Lion
The Sea Lion | |
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Directed by | Rowland V. Lee |
Written by |
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Produced by | Hobart Bosworth (producer) |
Starring | |
Cinematography |
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Production company | |
Distributed by | Associated Producers Incorporated |
Release date |
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Running time | 63 minutes (five reels of 4,367 feet) |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Sea Lion is a 1921 American silent adventure film directed by Rowland V. Lee, and starring Hobart Bosworth, Bessie Love, and Emory Johnson. It was produced and distributed by Associated Producers Incorporated. The team who worked on this film had previously made Lee's Blind Hearts (1921).[1][2]
The film has been preserved in the collections of the Library of Congress, the UCLA Film and Television Archive and the Pacific Film Archive.[3] It is also in the public domain.[4]
Plot
[edit]Captain John Nelson (Hobart Bosworth) and his crew hunt whales on the high seas. The captain is an angry man, having never recovered from his wife's leaving him for another man 20 years prior. When the ship comes to port, Tom (Emory Johnson), a young man, joins the crew as a lookout. He is distraught as well, having been jilted by his fiancée.
Back on the seas, the ship's inexperienced crew mistakes the water supply as a leak and pumps it overboard. The captain rations the remaining water and stores it in his quarters. The crew mutinies.
From the crow's nest, Tom spots a nearby island and comes down to tell the captain while the crew is asleep. The captain makes Tom the first mate, and they steer the ship to the nearby island. The island is inhabited by two survivors of an earlier shipwreck, one of whom is a beautiful young Blossom (Bessie Love). The survivors are brought back to the ship, where the captain resists letting them, board. The survivors promise to work on the ship, and he reluctantly agrees to let them travel.
Blossom learns that the captain's family name is Nelson, and says that her mother had the same name. The captain realizes that Blossom is the daughter of his wife, but assumes Blossom's father is another man. Blossom tells him that she never knew her father. During a storm at sea, the captain finds Blossom's Bible, which contains a note from her mother saying that she loved him all along. The captain realizes that Blossom is his daughter, and they are reconciled. Blossom and Tom fall in love.
Cast
[edit]- Hobart Bosworth as John Nelson, the Sea Lion
- Bessie Love as Blossom Nelson
- Emory Johnson as Tom Walton
- Richard Morris as Uncle Billy
- Charles Clary as Nathan Walton
- Carol Holloway as Dolly May
- Florence Carpenter as Florence
- Jack Curtis as Bentley
- J. Gordon Russell as Simmons
Production
[edit]Scenes were filmed aboard the Fox, which was anchored off Balboa in Orange County.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Bennett, Carl (August 2, 2008). "Progressive Silent Film List: The Sea Lion". Silent Era.
- ^ Munden, Kenneth W., ed. (1971). The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films 1921–1930. New York: R.R. Bowker Company. p. 690. OCLC 664500075.
- ^ "American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Sea Lion / Rowland V Lee [motion picture]". Library of Congress.
- ^ "The Sea Lion". Internet Archive. 1921.
- ^ Sleeper, Jim (1980). "The Lighthouse Keeper's Daughter". Great Movies Shot in Orange County. Trabuco Canyon, CA: California Classics. p. 130. OCLC 7358612.
External links
[edit]- The Sea Lion at IMDb
- The Sea Lion at AllMovie
- The Sea Lion at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- The Sea Lion is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
- Kramer, Fritzi (February 3, 2013). "The Sea Lion (1921), a silent film review, with stills". moviessilently.com.
- 1921 films
- 1920s adventure drama films
- American adventure drama films
- American black-and-white films
- American silent feature films
- Films about whaling
- Films directed by Rowland V. Lee
- Films shot in California
- Surviving American silent films
- 1921 drama films
- Films with screenplays by Joseph F. Poland
- 1920s English-language films
- 1920s American films
- Silent American adventure drama films
- English-language adventure drama films
- Silent adventure film stubs