The Green Temptation
The Green Temptation | |
---|---|
![]() Film Poster | |
Directed by | William Desmond Taylor |
Written by | Julia Crawford Ivers (scenario) Monte Katterjohn (scenario) |
Based on | "The Noose" by Constance Lindsay Skinner |
Produced by | Adolph Zukor Jesse L. Lasky |
Starring | Betty Compson Theodore Kosloff |
Cinematography | James Van Trees |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 60 minutes; 6 reels |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Green Temptation is a lost[1] 1922 American silent melodrama film directed by William Desmond Taylor and starring Betty Compson.[2][3] It was written by Julia Crawford Ivers and Monte Katterjohn based upon the short story "The Noose" by Constance Lindsay Skinner.


Plot
[edit]Betty plays a girl who is involved in the Paris criminal underworld. During World War I she becomes a wartime Red Cross nurse and after the war leaves for America for a new start in life. There she meets an old wartime colleague (Kosloff), a criminal who is conniving to steal a valuable jewel called 'The Green Temptation'. Kosloff wants Betty to help him steal the jewel and when she balks he threatens to reveal her sordid past to her new American friends. Scotland Yard detective (Mahlon Hamilton), probably hired to protect the jewel, is sweet on Betty and kills Kosloff when he tries to steal the jewel.
The film has a similarity to von Stroheim's Foolish Wives released that same year.
Cast
[edit]- Betty Compson as Genelle / Coralyn / Joan Parker
- Mahlon Hamilton as John Allenby
- Theodore Kosloff as Gaspard
- Neely Edwards as Pitou
- Edmund Burns as Hugh Duyker (credited as Edward Burns)
- Lenore Lynard as Duchesse de Chazarin
- Mary Thurman as Dolly Dunton
- William von Hardenburg as Monsieur Jounet
- Betty Brice as Mrs. Weedon Duyker
- Arthur Hull as Mr. Weedon Duyker
Production
[edit]The Green Temptation was released posthumously following the unsolved murder of its director William Desmond Taylor on February 1, 1922.
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- 1922 films
- 1922 drama films
- 1922 lost films
- 1920s American films
- 1920s English-language films
- 1920s melodrama films
- American black-and-white films
- American silent feature films
- American World War I films
- English-language drama films
- Films based on short stories
- Films directed by William Desmond Taylor
- Films set in Paris
- Lost American drama films
- Lost silent American films
- Paramount Pictures films
- Silent American drama films
- 1920s silent drama film stubs