Men of Steel

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1926 ad for "Men of Steel"

Men of Steel was a 1926 silent feature film directed by George Archainbaud and starring Milton Sills, Doris Kenyon and May Allison.

The screenplay, by Sills himself, was based on the story "United States Flavor" by Ralph G. Kirk, which had been published in the Saturday Evening Post of June 14, 1924. In the film Mills plays Jan Bokak, a fugitive wrongly accused of murder. Under an assumed name he takes a job in a steel mill. He is injured in an accident caused by labor agitators and convalesces at the home of the owner, who has taken a liking to him.

His courtship of the owner's daughter, Claire (May Allison), is interrupted by the reappearance of an old girlfriend, Mary (Doris Kenyon) who is secretly Claire's sister. At the same time Bokak's accuser, after attempting to kill him by pouring molten steel over him, ends up confessing to the murder himself.

Men of Steel was produced and distributed by First National Pictures. It was filmed at the Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Company's Ensley Works and elsewhere in Ensley, with many local residents cast as extras. It premiered in June 1926 at the Mark Strand Theatre on Broadway and had a local premiere the Ensley's Franklin Theatre.

Sills and Kenyon were married in October 1926. He died in 1930, leaving her with a son.

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