Wolf Blood
Wolf Blood | |
---|---|
Directed by |
George Chesebro Bruce Mitchell |
Written by | Cliff Hill |
Starring |
George Chesebro Roy Watson Milburn Morante Frank Clark Marguerite Clayton Ray Hanford Jack Cosgrave |
Production company |
Ryan Brothers Productions |
Distributed by | Lee-Bradford Corporation |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 68 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language |
Silent film English intertitles |
Wolf Blood, also known as Wolfblood: A Tale of the Forest, is a silent 1925 werewolf film starring George Chesebro, who also directed it.
Plot
Dick Bannister is the new field boss of the Ford Logging Company, a Canadian logging-crew during a time when conflicts with the powerful Consolidated Lumber Company, a bitter rival company, have turned bloody, like a private war. His boss, Miss Edith Ford, comes to inspect the lumberjack camp, bringing her doctor fiancé with her. Dick is attacked by his rivals and left for dead. His loss of blood is so great that he needs a transfusion, but no human will volunteer, so the surgeon uses a wolf as a source of the blood. Afterwards, Dick begins having dreams where he runs with a pack of phantom wolves, and the rival loggers get killed by wolves. Soon, these facts have spread through the camp and most of the lumberjacks decide that Dick is a werewolf. Bannister, in his attempt to jump off a cliff, is rescued by Edith.
Cast
- George Chesebro – Dick Bannister.
- Marguerite Clayton – Miss Edith Ford, owner of the Ford Logging Company.
- Raymond "Ray" Hanford – Dr. Eugene "Gene" Horton, Edith's fiancé.
- Roy Watson – Jules Deveroux, envious owner of the Consolidated Lumber Company.
- Milburn Morante – Jacques Lebeq, notorious bootlegger.
- Frank Clark – Old Pop Hadley, alcoholic woods guard for the Ford Logging Company.
- Jack Cosgrave – Edith's uncle and manager.
Production
The film has been referenced in a number of books as being the first werewolf movie ever made. This however is erroneous; the first werewolf movie is The Werewolf, a film made in 1913. However this film is considered to be lost. Therefore Wolf Blood should rather be called the earliest surviving werewolf film.
This motion picture is available commercially as part of DVD along with F.W. Murnau's The Haunted Castle.
External links
- Wolf Blood at the Internet Movie Database
- Wolf Blood is available for free download at the Internet Archive
- Wolf Blood at AllMovie