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The Runaway (1926 film)

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The Runaway
Lobby card
Directed byWilliam C. deMille
Written byAlbert Shelby Le Vino
Based onThe Flight to the Hills
by Charles Neville Buck
Produced byFamous Players–Lasky
StarringClara Bow
Warner Baxter
William Powell
George Bancroft
CinematographyCharles P. Boyle
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • April 5, 1926 (1926-04-05)
Running time
69 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

The Runaway is a 1926 American silent film melodrama directed by William C. deMille and starring Clara Bow, Warner Baxter, William Powell, and George Bancroft. The plot involves a movie star who erroneously assumes that she has murdered someone and flees to Kentucky. The cinematography was by Charles P. Boyle.[1][2]

Plot

Cynthia Meade (Clara Bow), a wild, high spirited New York movie actress, meets Jack Harrison (William Powell), a wealthy young New Yorker, in a Tennessee city. She is hoping he will be able to help her with her movie career, but he demands a relationship in return. A stray bullet comes through the window and he is dangerously wounded while with Cynthia. Realizes how hard it will be to prove her innocence, Cynthea flees, thinking Harrison dead. On a lonely road, Cynthia, half hysterical and nearly exhausted, appeals to Wade Murrell (Warner Baxter), a young mountaineer on the way back to his Kentucky home. He believes that she is running away from danger and takes her with him. Arriving at his house, he is disgusted when he learns she cannot cook or do any of the daily chores of hill women. However, she finally wins the confidence of his mother (Edythe Chapman). Several weeks later, Harrison, the supposedly dead man, appears, saying he is seeking the person who shot and left him for dead. Murrell does not know at first that Cynthia is the person Harrison suspects, and the two become good friends. The presence of a “painted woman,” as the hill people call Cynthia, arouses a terrific antipathy toward Murrell, and he narrowly avoids being killed by one of their number. In the end, Cynthia is forced to choose between her old and new lover, but not before the three have passed through many crises.[3]

Cast

Preservation status

The Runaway is believed to be lost.[4]

References

  1. ^ Progressive Silent Film List: The Runaway at silentera.com Retrieved June 23, 2016
  2. ^ The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: The Runaway Retrieved June 23, 2016
  3. ^ The Pomona Progress Bulletin (CA), 17 Sep. 1926, p. 10.
  4. ^ The Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Runaway Retrieved June 23, 2016