Red Lights (1923 film)

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Red Lights
Edward E. Rose (play)
  • Carey Wilson
  • Alice D.G. Miller
  • Starring
    CinematographyRudolph J. Bergquist
    Production
    company
    Distributed byGoldwyn Pictures
    Release date
    September 30, 1923
    Running time
    70 minutes
    CountryUnited States
    LanguagesSilent
    English intertitles

    Red Lights is a 1923 American

    railroad
    tycoon who is about to be reunited with his daughter who was kidnapped many years ago.

    Plot

    Most of the film takes place on a moving train. A psychic named Sheridan Scott professes to have the ability to foresee and prevent criminal acts. He agrees to help Ruth Carson, the daughter of a wealthy railroad magnate, solve a mystery regarding why flashing red lights over her head portend death for various people around her. Ruth had been kidnapped years earlier, and was later found and reunited with her father. The young heroine comes to believe her long-deceased uncle is menacing her from the beyond, but Scott solves the mystery of the flashing red lights, and learns the true identity of the man behind a plot to murder the young heiress and steal her inheritance...a scientist who uses telepathy to frighten the young woman.

    Cast

    Production

    The film is based on a play called The Rear Car by

    Edward E. Rose, but according to critic Christopher Workman, "the film is not very faithful to its source material....it's a moderately enjoyable ride regardless." The film's survival status is unknown.[2]

    The play was filmed again in 1934 as Murder in the Private Car, starring Charles Ruggles as the psychic detective, although in that version, the supernatural elements were played down a bit.[3] Actor Lionel Belmore went on to co-star in a number of 1930s Universal horror films including Frankenstein and The Vampire Bat. Jean Hersholt later starred in a number of MGM horror films, including The Mask of Fu Manchu and Mark of the Vampire.[4]

    References

    1. .
    2. ^ Red Lights at silentera.com. Retrieved November 18, 2022.
    3. .
    4. .

    External links