Coming Through: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''''Coming Through'''' was a 1925 silent feature film based on reporter Jack Bethea's melodramatic novel ''Bed Rock'' which was se...)
 
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'''''Coming Through'''' was a [[1925]] silent [[List of feature films shot in Birmingham|feature film]] based on reporter [[Jack Bethea]]'s melodramatic novel ''[[Bed Rock]]'' which was set in the [[Cahaba coal fields]] south of [[Birmingham]].
'''''Coming Through''''' was a [[1925]] silent [[List of feature films shot in Birmingham|feature film]] based on reporter [[Jack Bethea]]'s melodramatic novel ''[[Bed Rock]]'' which was set in the [[Cahaba coal fields]] south of [[Birmingham]].


Rights to the story were bought by the New York-based Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, parent to Paramount Pictures. Paul Schofield adapted the story into a screenplay.  Jesse L. Lasky brought the production to the [[Birmingham District]] for location filming in the autumn of [[1924]]. Director A. Edward Sutherland and stars Thomas Meighan, Wallace Beery and Lila Lee stayed with families in [[Brookside]] while they completed the filming of exterior scenes in Brookside, [[New Castle]] and in mining camps along [[Oxmoor Road]].
Rights to the story were bought by the New York-based Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, parent to Paramount Pictures. Paul Schofield adapted the story into a screenplay.  Jesse L. Lasky brought the production to the [[Birmingham District]] for location filming in the autumn of [[1924]]. Director A. Edward Sutherland and stars Thomas Meighan, Wallace Beery and Lila Lee stayed with families in [[Brookside]] while they completed the filming of exterior scenes in Brookside, [[New Castle]] and in mining camps along [[Oxmoor Road]].

Revision as of 12:05, 23 September 2007

Coming Through was a 1925 silent feature film based on reporter Jack Bethea's melodramatic novel Bed Rock which was set in the Cahaba coal fields south of Birmingham.

Rights to the story were bought by the New York-based Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, parent to Paramount Pictures. Paul Schofield adapted the story into a screenplay. Jesse L. Lasky brought the production to the Birmingham District for location filming in the autumn of 1924. Director A. Edward Sutherland and stars Thomas Meighan, Wallace Beery and Lila Lee stayed with families in Brookside while they completed the filming of exterior scenes in Brookside, New Castle and in mining camps along Oxmoor Road.

Meighan played the typical "quiet and strong, kindly and brave" hero, Tom Blackford, who marries a reluctant mine owner's daughter, Alice (Lee). The owner (played by John Miltem) makes Blackford a mine superintendent, hoping to see him fail. To hasten his downfall, he hires Joe Lawler (Beery) to make life miserable for Blackford. Lawler conspires with a saloon keeper (Laurence Wheat) to provoke a strike. Blackford manages to foil the scheme, however In the culminating fight sequence, Lawler gets thrown off a mine tipple when his crowbar gets caught in the conveyor. In the end, Alice confesses her love for him.

Beery made a habit of frequenting Brookside's saloons during filming and nearly died filming the stunt where he halls from the mine tipple. The film premiered on February 17, 1925 in New York City. It was generally panned by critics and remains obscure.

References

  • Jones, Pam (Summer 2007) "A "Wild West" Town in Alabama: Brookside." Alabama Heritage. No. 85, pp. 26-37
  • "The New Pictures" (February 16, 1925) TIME Magazine.

External links