For His Mother's Sake Explained

Starring:Jack Johnson
Studio:Blackburn-Velde Pictures
Distributor:Fidelity Pictures Company
Country:United States
Language:Silent

For His Mother's Sake is a 1922 American silent film, starring heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson. It was a Blackburn-Velde Pictures production distributed by Fidelity Pictures Company. The film opened in January 1922 at the New Douglas Theater at Lexington Avenue and 142nd Street in Harlem.[1] It is believed there was only one five reel print of the movie, due to the studio owners seizing the negative when the film's producers failed to pay their bills.

Plot

Johnson's character in the film flees to Mexico after taking the blame for a crime committed by his brother.[2] It has been described as a "prodigal son" story. Johnson has been described as demonstrating, in this film, in As the World Rolls On, and through his prizefighting, "to a generation of African-American male youth that athletics was one of the few ways out of the ghetto or off the sharecropper's farm."[3]

Mattie Wilkes portrayed Johnson's mother in the sentimental melodrama about a man taking the blame for his brother's crime.[4]

Banned

The Ohio State Bureau of Motion Pictures banned the film because of Johnson's criminal record.[2] [5]

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ward, Geoffrey C.. Unforgivable blackness : the rise and fall of Jack Johnson. 2004. New York : A.A. Knopf. 978-0-375-41532-6.
  2. Book: The Boxing Film: A Cultural and Transmedia History. 9781978801370. Vogan. Travis. 16 October 2020. Rutgers University Press .
  3. Book: Butters, Gerald R. . Black Manhood on the Silent Screen . University Press of Kansas . 2002 . 978-0-7006-1197-3 . Lawrence, Kansas.
  4. Web site: For His Mother's Sake. TVGuide.com.
  5. News: Contemporary Criticisms . Camera . 15 . May 6, 1922 .
  6. Web site: For His Mother's Sake. www.tcm.com.
  7. Web site: For His Mother's Sake. www.tcm.com.