The Next Corner is a 1924 American silent romantic melodrama film directed by Sam Wood. The film starred Dorothy Mackaill and Lon Chaney. Based on the romance novel of the same name by Kate Jordan, the film was produced by Famous Players–Lasky and distributed by Paramount Pictures.[1]

The Next Corner
Daybill poster
Directed bySam Wood
Written byMonte Katterjohn (screenplay)
Based onThe Next Corner
by Kate Jordan
Produced byAdolph Zukor
Jesse J. Lasky
StarringDorothy Mackaill
Lon Chaney
Conway Tearle
Louise Dresser
Ricardo Cortez
CinematographyAlfred Gilks
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • February 18, 1924 (1924-02-18)
Running time
70 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Throughout the years, The Next Corner has been cited as a Chaney picture but, according to the American Film Institute Catalog, his character has little screen time. In fact, of all Chaney's feature films of the 1920s, this picture seems to have less of him on screen than any other feature he made. A still exists showing Chaney in his role as Juan Serafin[2] and it shows how little makeup he wore in this picture. Another still of Chaney can be seen here.[3]

This film was Chaney's only Paramount film of the 1920s, the last having been Treasure Island, and was one of the last films he appeared in as a freelance artist before signing a multiple picture deal with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[4]

The leading character is portrayed by Dorothy Mackaill, then an up-and-coming young star. The novel was remade in sound in 1931 at RKO as Transgression starring Kay Francis and Nance O'Neil, with Ricardo Cortez returning to the same role.

Plot

edit

Elsie Maury (Dorothy Mackaill) and her wealthy American husband Robert (Conway Tearle) spend their honeymoon in Paris, where she becomes acquainted with the smarmy Don Arturo (Ricardo Cortez), who plots to seduce her. When her husband rushes off to Argentina on a business trip, she and her mother remain in Paris to await his return. Elsie accept an invitation to attend a house party that is to held at Don Arturo's home. She is accompanied only by Juan Serafin (Lon Chaney), one of Arturo's aides, and when she arrives, she is surprised to find they are the only guests. Don Arturo attempts to seduce her, but before she succumbs to his charms, she is compelled to write a letter addressed to her husband in which she confesses that she and Arturo are now lovers.

Before the letter can be mailed however, Don Arturo manages to open the envelope and substitute two sheets of blank paper in place of the letter, and then reseal it again. Soon after, a stranger arrives at the house and shoots Don Arturo dead for having seduced his peasant daughter on an earlier occasion. Elsie, thinking the letter was mailed, returns to Paris and tells her mother to help her intercept the missive. Juan Serafin, thinking his master's death was Elsie's fault, takes it upon himself to maliciously deliver the letter to Robert in person.

Elsie feels she has no choice but to come clean now, and confesses the whole affair to her husband. But when he opens the envelope, all he finds are the two blank sheets of paper that Don Arturo had substituted. He forgives Elsie nonetheless and embraces her. Later Juan Serafin is found shot to death, clutching one of Elsie's handkerchiefs in his hand.

 
Contemporary advertisement

Cast

edit

Critical Comments

edit

"Old fashioned in theme and characterization and conventional in treatment is this picture which carries very little entertaining qualities. Any faithful filmgoer will recognize the plot as belonging to a threadbare formula--one which has done yeoman service on the screen. The best feature of the picture is Dorothy Mackaill's vital performance...Conway Tearle as the husband and Ricardo Cortez as the other man are also effective, while Lon Chaney's personality is buried in a small role...It is a finely mounted production, but the story is weak." ---Motion Picture News

"Well it was fearfully cold and the radio must have been good, as we had no crowd at all to see this one, and we were glad, as it is a very poor show. Lay off. Poor audience appeal." ---Moving Picture World

"An unintentionally funny melodrama which may amuse but will not impress intelligent audiences...Why Lon Chaney consented to appear in such a foolish role as that of foster-brother Serafin remains an unsolved problem." ---Exhibitors Trade Review

"Slow draggy development and poor direction....Lon Chaney's great ability is completely lost in this". ---Film Daily

"Just a programme picture, that's all... Conway Tearle and Lon Chaney have little to do". ---Photoplay

"(The film) has a silly story. Lon Chaney has a weak part and gets into the fore now and then in subordinate situations where he has very little to build on". ---Variety

Preservation

edit

With no copies of The Next Corner located in any film archives,[5] it is a lost film.

Taglines

edit

"THE story of a youthful wife who couldn't discern between real and artificial love. And paid in heartache and remorse to learn. It's a big theme, powerfully told."

"The daring story of a young married woman who played with the fire of forbiiden love and was caught in the flames!.... A theme of sensational surprise building to an astounding climax!" (one-sheet blurb)

"Lover or Husband... Which? The story of a wife who strayed!" (one-sheet blurb)

References

edit
  1. ^ Progressive Silent Film List: The Next Corner at silentera.com
  2. ^ "The Next Corner (1924)".
  3. ^ "Silent Era : Progressive Silent Film List".
  4. ^ The AFI Catalog of Feature Films: The Next Corner (Wayback)
  5. ^ The Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Next Corner
edit