The Brute (1920 film)

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The Brute
Newspaper advertisement for the film
Directed byOscar Micheaux
Written byOscar Micheaux
Produced byOscar Micheaux
Cinematography"Whitie" [Note 1]
Production
company
Micheaux Film Corp.
Distributed byMicheaux Film Corp.
Release date
1920
Running time
7 reels
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent

The Brute is a 1920 silent race film directed, written, produced and distributed by Oscar Micheaux. No print of the film is known to exist and the production is believed to be a lost film.[2] The original version of the film included a scene where the boxer defeats a white rival, but Micheaux was forced to remove the scene by censors.[3]

Plot

Herbert Lanyon is thought to be dead after a shipwreck, and his fiancée Mildred Carrison is forced by her money-minded Aunt Clara into marriage with "Bull" Magee, a gambler and underworld boss who mistreats Mildred. After Herbert returns, Magee undergoes financial difficulties that he blames on Mildred and Herbert, and seeks revenge. Herbert and a repentant Aunt Clara, however, free Mildred from Magee, and the lovers are able to marry. A subplot involves boxer "Tug" Wilson, who is ordered by his manager Magee to lay down in the seventeenth round of a prizefight at the film's climax. No other information concerning the plot has been discovered.

—American Film Institute

Cast

  • Evelyn Preer – Mildred Carrison
  • A. B. DeComathiere – Bull Magee
  • Sam Langford – Tug Wilson
  • Susie Sutton – Aunt Clara
  • Lawrence Chenault – Herbert Lanyon
  • Laura Bowman – Mrs. Carrison
  • Mattie Edwards – Guest in "The Hole"
  • Alice Gorgas – Margaret Pendleton
  • Virgil Williams – Referee
  • Marty Cutler – Sidney Kirkwood
  • Floy Clements – Irene Lanyon[4]
  • Louis Schooler – Klondike
  • Harry Plater
  • E. G. Tatum
  • Al Gaines

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In the records of the George P. Johnson Negro Film Collection, the cameraman was identified only as "Whitie."[1]

References

  1. ^ "The Brute". American Film Institute.
  2. ^ “Progressive Silent Film List: The Brute,” SilentEra.com
  3. ^ “The cutting gaze of Oscar Micheaux,” UWM Leader, February 8, 2006 Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Foster, A.L. (November 22, 1958). "Other Peoples Business: A Proud First". Chicago Defender – via ProQuest.

External links