Out of the Darkness
(1915) United States of America
B&W : Five reels
Directed by George Melford
Cast: Charlotte Walker [Helen Scott], Thomas Meighan [Harvey Brooks], Marjorie Daw [Jennie Sands], Hal Clements [John Scott], Tom Forman [Tom Jameson], Loyola O’Connor [Mrs. Sands]
Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company, Incorporated, production; distributed by Paramount Pictures Corporation. / Scenario by Hector Turnbull, from the screen story “The Revelation” by Hector Turnbull. Presented by Jesse L. Lasky. / © 20 August 1915 by Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company, Incorporated [LU6143]. Released 9 September 1915. / Standard 35mm spherical 1.33:1 format. / Working title: The Revelation.
Drama.
Synopsis: [?] [From The Moving Picture World]? Helen Scott has been left the sole owner of the Scott Canneries by her father’s death, but being too busy with social duties, she leaves the handling of the industry’s business to her hard-fisted uncle and only calls upon him when she needs money. Harvey Brooks, manager of the canneries’ Tampa branch, is a hard-working young man with new ideas of social welfare. He has hundreds of people in his employ working under most unfavorable conditions for starvation wages. He has pleaded with Helen Scott and her uncle to better the working conditions but has always been ignored. During the height of the social season, Helen goes to Palm Beach, Florida with a party of friends for the yacht races. While sailing her sloop one foggy night, it is run down and sunk by a large schooner, a fruit carrier for the Scott canneries. Helen is rescued from the sea by the captain of the schooner. The heiress is stunned by a blow on the head, received at the time her sloop was struck. When she recovers she is unable to remember her name or her identity. The schooner captain takes Helen to his home, and when she has recovered, his daughter, who works in the cannery, secures Helen a position beside her at the cutting table. Brooks, hearing of Helen’s accident and loss of identity, takes an interest in her and she is attracted by his kind manner. Labor leaders are urging the cannery workers to strike and place the blame for the conditions upon young Brooks. One night Brooks is slugged and bound to a chair in his frame office building and the plant is set on fire by the excited workers. Helen rushes through the flames to his aid and as she unbinds him she is overcome by smoke and falls unconscious by his chair. Brooks carries her to safety through the burning buildings and returns her to the schooner captain’s home. While they are both recovering from their burns a detective, employed by the uncle, locates Helen. The shock of the fire and the burns has slightly restored Helen’s memory and the clever detective finally brings her to realize who she really is. Helen is in love with Brooks and he with her, believing that she is a poor factory girl. The heiress realizes that Brooks hates the real Helen Scott for her indifference to the workers. When he has recovered she meets him alone, tells him she is Helen Scott, and breaks down his wall of hatred and together they go to help their coworkers.
Survival status: Print exists in the Eye Film Instituut Nederland film archive [35mm positive].
Current rights holder: Public domain [USA].
Listing updated: 13 April 2024.
References: Tarbox-Lost p. 245 : Website-AFI; Website-ASFFDb; Website-IMDb.
|