A Child for Sale

A Child for Sale

Film poster
Directed by Ivan Abramson
Produced by Ivan Abramson
Written by Ivan Abramson
Starring Gladys Leslie, Creighton Hale
Cinematography Louis Dunmyre
Production
company
Graphic Films Corp.
Distributed by Graphic Films Corp.
Release dates
  • April 1920 (1920-04)
Running time
6 reels (approximately 60 minutes)
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

A Child for Sale is a 1920 American silent drama film directed by Ivan Abramson, starring Gladys Leslie and Creighton Hale.[1]

Plot

Charles Stoddard (played by Hale) is a poor artist living with his wife and two children in Greenwich Village. Destitute after his wife dies, he is forced to sell one of his children for $1,000 to a childless rich woman. He soon comes to his senses however, and backs out of the deal. From there, the story takes a number of twists and turns involving Ruth Gardner (Leslie) (the wife of Dr. Gardner who treats Stoddard's child for illness) and Ruth's parents -- whose father is also Stoddard's landlord and mother is later revealed to be Stoddard's long-lost mother from a prior marriage.[2]

Cast

Publicity

Advertisement in the Reading Eagle, October 29, 1920

The ad campaign for the film included a faux advertisement for selling a child.[3][4][5]

Reception

Critic Burns Mantle noted some shortcomings of the film in his review of the "melodramatic opus" in Photoplay,[6] stating that "Ivan Abramson's idea of what constitutes a coherent and convincing dramatic story, taking this picture as a sample, offer many opportunities for the raucous hoot and the mirthful snort. ...His picture is an inartistic jumble of unrelated incidents to me ..." Other contemporary reviews were of a more non-specific and generally positive nature, such as the review by the New York Clipper which described the picture as "intensely interesting from start to finish."[2]

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to A Child for Sale.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.