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Download By The Sun's Rays
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DOWNLOAD: http://urllio.com/r2s32
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Bandits capture a gold shipment from the Colorado mines. Where did they get the information that the shipment was to be made? A detective is sent from the company's Chicago office to aid John Davis, mine superintendent, in finding the criminals. Under their very noses another shipment is stolen. Frank Lawlor, clerk in the office, loves Davis' daughter, Dora. The girl feels a strange repugnance for the man. When the detective Murdock arrives, her woman's heart awakens. Lawler is angry, but conceals his feelings. Another shipment is to be made. Murdock gathers a posse and sends them out. He is starting himself for their hiding place when Dora comes along on her horse. Love drives out other thoughts for a few moments, when a sudden flash of sunlight strikes their faces. Murdock is startled. Taking his field-glasses he sees Lawler on a distant hill, flashing a signal with a mirror to someone below. The treacherous clerk returns to the office. Murdock, leading the posse, captures the accomplices. Dora is holding Lawlor at the office by pretending to accept his hated love making when the posse returns. Seeing the game is up, Lawlor attempts to escape, is shot and his body brought back. Dora and Murdock acknowledge their love as the picture fades.
Frank Lawler, a clerk for a mining company, colludes with a bandit gang about the timing of gold shipments with a mirror signal system and has designs on Doris Davis, the daughter of the local branch manager. The company's main office dispatches their top detective John Murdock, who goes undercover to expose the scheme and rescue the Doris from the unwanted advances of the dastardly Lawler.
This one reel silent film western isn't in the best of shape, but it features a rare good guy played by Lon Chaney at the beginning of his career. It's really a bit part, and he looks almost how you would expect him to look in real life. The film is pretty hard to follow because there isn't enough time for character or plot development, and both the title sequences and a shot of a letter seem to have faded with time. It's got the typical bandits (out to steal some gold), a hero, the damsel in distress, and several clichéd supporting characters (including Chaney). I rank this one as more a curiosity for film historians and students, one lessened in impact by the passage of time and a reminded that really nothing, including the best art, lasts forever.
In 1914, most movies were short--fifteen minutes or less. And as a result, the stories were very simple and the acting sometimes a bit over-done in order to quickly convey emotion or action. In light of this, BY THE SUN'S RAYS is a pretty good but very typical film. By standards of only a decade later, the narrative is amazingly simple and poor, as everything is do obvious in the film. When Lon Chaney (in an early role) appears on screen, by his pantomime it's obvious he's the villain who is sneaking information about a gold shipment to the bandits--there is no suspense at all. And when the hero comes to town to investigate, it's a foregone conclusion that he's catch the rogues and get the girl in the end. In 1914, this was a good solid film that unforatunately today looks terribly dated and obvious. Of interest primarily to film historians and fans of early silent film. All others, watch at your own risk.
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