Riders Of The Purple Sage (1918 Film)
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''Riders of the Purple Sage'' is a 1982 American silent Western film directed by Frank Lloyd and starring William Farnum, Mary Mersch, and William Scott. The film is about a former Texas Ranger who goes after a group of
Mormons Mormons are a religious and cultural group related to Mormonism, the principal branch of the Latter Day Saint movement started by Joseph Smith in upstate New York during the 1820s. After Smith's death in 1844, the movement split into several ...
who have abducted his married sister. This Frank Lloyd silent film was the first of five film adaptations of
the novel ''The Novel'' (1991) is a novel written by American author James A. Michener. A departure from Michener's better known historical fiction, ''The Novel'' is told from the viewpoints of four different characters involved in the life and work of ...
.


Plot

Former Texas Ranger Lassiter (William Farnum) leaves Texas and travels to Arizona sage country pursuing a group of Mormons who abducted his married sister. He arrives at the Withersteen ranch near the Utah border, where his sister was last seen. He meets the Withersteens and their beautiful daughter, Jane (Mary Mersch). Lassiter rescues her rider, Venters (William Scott), from torture at the hands of a villain named Tull (Murdock MacQuarrie). Soon, Lassiter falls in love with Jane, but when she learns about his mission, she is reluctant to help him, fearing more violence will come to the region. Her feelings for him change, however, when she sees the hardened gunfighter befriend her ward, a young orphan girl named Fay Larkin ( Nancy Caswell). While Venters is out searching for the rustlers who have been raiding the Withersteens' ranch and stealing their cattle, he wounds and captures the rustlers' masked leader, who turns out to be a beautiful young woman (Katherine Adams). Rather than turning her over to the law, Venters brings her to a secluded valley, where the two fall in love. Meanwhile, Lassiter learns that his sister is dead, and that the man who abducted her, Dyer (Marc Robbins), is also responsible for much of the trouble faced by Jane and her family. Lassiter tracks the villain and raids a Mormon meeting, killing Dyer. The angry Mormons then pursue Lassiter, Jane, and Fay to the secluded valley where they meet Venters and the repentant cattle thief, whom Lassiter recognizes as his dead sister's daughter, Millie. Venters and the girl escape the Mormons, but Lassiter, in rolling a huge boulder down on his pursuers, blocks the only exit to the valley, trapping himself, Jane, and Fay inside the valley forever.


Cast

* William Farnum as Lassiter *
Mary Mersch Mary Mersch (January 4, 1887 – February 26, 1956), sometimes credited as May Mersch, was an American actress active from the silent era up to 1938. She was under contract with Fox, and often worked with directors like William Farnum and Fra ...
as Jane * William Scott as Venters * Marc Robbins as Dyer *
Murdock MacQuarrie Murdock MacQuarrie (August 25, 1878 – August 20, 1942) was an American silent film actor and director. His name was also seen as Murdock McQuarrie. MacQuarrie was born in San Francisco, California, and attended school there. He was the ...
as Tull * Kathryn Adams as Masked Rider / Millie * Nancy Caswell as Fay Larkin * J. Holmes as Jerry Carol * Buck Jones as Bit part (uncredited) * Jack Nelson as Bit part (uncredited)


Production

''Riders of the Purple Sage'' features uncredited bit parts by future silent film stars Buck Jones and Jack Nelson.


Reception

''Riders of the Purple Sage'' received mixed reviews upon its theatrical release in 1918. The reviewer for ''Motion Picture News'' wrote: The reviewer for ''Variety'' called the film a "not-too-absorbing adaptation of the novel", noting that the film "does not rise above the level of the average Western photoplay of this type and there is no special distinction in direction or photography." In her review for ''Allmovie'', Janiss Garza wrote that despite the "rousing climax", the film was "not one of the better adaptations of the Zane Grey novel." Like many American films of the time, ''Riders of the Purple Sage'' was subject to restrictions and cuts by city and state film censorship boards. For example, the Chicago Board of Censors required a cut, in Reel 3, of the man falling after Lassiter shoots, Reel 6, the intertitle "He made me — I can't tell you — I can't —", the shooting of Oldring, and, Reel 7, last shooting scene in which a Mormon is killed.


Reissues

The film was reissued on April 3, 1921.


See also

*
Riders of the Purple Sage ''Riders of the Purple Sage'' is a Western novel by Zane Grey, first published by Harper & Brothers in 1912. Considered by scholars to have played a significant role in shaping the formula of the popular Western genre, the novel has been call ...
*
1937 Fox vault fire The 1937 Fox vault fire was a major fire that broke out in a 20th Century-Fox film-storage facility in Little Ferry, New Jersey, United States, on July 9, 1937. Flammable nitrate film had previously contributed to several fires in film-industr ...


References


External links

* * *
''Riders of the Purple Sage'' at silentera.com
{{Frank Lloyd , state=collapsed 1918 films 1918 Western (genre) films Films based on works by Zane Grey Fox Film films Films based on American novels Films directed by Frank Lloyd Films set in Arizona American black-and-white films Silent American Western (genre) films 1910s American films 1910s English-language films