Résumés(1)
In all likelihood the only surviving film starring early silent screen leading man Monroe Salisbury, this very old fashioned but enjoyable Northwoods melodrama begged the question of who were the real "barbarians" -- the "uncivilized" but proud trapper or the greedy capitalists out to use him? Better known today as a distinguished MGM character actor, director Donald Crisp had been taught by the best in the business: D. W. Griffith. And there is something Griffith like about this moralistic melodrama of a young trapper, a veritable child of nature, discovering that the woman he desires is the daughter of an unscrupulous smelting tycoon out to destroy the land. (texte officiel du distributeur)
(plus)Acteurs·trices
J. Barney Sherry
États-Unis
Meilleurs films :
Civilization (1916)
Jane Novak
États-Unis
Meilleurs films :
Sublime infamie (1919)
Holiday Inn (1942)
Correspondant 17 (1940)
Alan Hale
États-Unis
Meilleurs films :
New York-Miami (1934)
Robin des Bois (1922)
Convoi vers la Russie (1943)
Lillian Leighton
États-Unis
Meilleurs films :
À la hauteur (1930)
Le Signe de la croix (1932)
Male and Female (1919)
George Berrell
États-Unis
Meilleurs films :
Ce crétin de Malek (1920)