Without Benefit of Clergy | |
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Directed by | James Young |
Written by | Randolph C. Lewis |
Based on | Without Benefit of Clergy by Rudyard Kipling |
Produced by | Robert Brunton |
Starring | Nigel De Brulier Virginia Brown Faire Boris Karloff Thomas Holding |
Cinematography | Jack Okey |
Production company | Robert Brunton Productions |
Distributed by | Pathé Exchange |
Release date |
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Running time | 6 reels (1 hour) |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
Without Benefit of Clergy is a 1921 American silent drama film directed by James Young and featuring Virginia Brown Faire, Thomas Holding and Boris Karloff.[2] It is based on the story by Rudyard Kipling.[3] A print of the film still exists at the UCLA Film and Television Archives and at Archives Du Film Du CNC (Bois D'Arcy/Paris).[4][5]
Holden, a young English engineer in India, falls in love with the native girl Ameera, so he buys her from her mother. Their marital union violates the strict social structure they live in. They live together very happily until their baby son dies. Later, Ameera dies during a cholera epidemic.[6] The film's tagline was "The deathless drama of Ameera, the Hindu girl, and the British engineer, whose "love need no caste." (Print Ad in the Sunday Chronicle, ((Paterson, NJ)) 4 September 1921)