Easy to Get | |
Director: | Joseph De Grasse |
Producer: | George W. Stout |
Starring: | Sessue Hayakawa Florence Turner |
Cinematography: | Frank D. Williams |
Studio: | Haworth Pictures Corporation |
Distributor: | Robertson-Cole Distributing Corporation |
Runtime: | 50 minutes; 5 reels |
Country: | United States |
Language: | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Brand of Lopez is a 1920 American film directed by Joseph De Grasse and produced by Sessue Hayakawa's Haworth Pictures Corporation.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] Although the main characters are a matador and an actress, there are no bull fighting or theater scenes portrayed in the film.
As described in a film magazine,[7] matador Vasco Lopez (Hayakawa) is the idol of Spain. His engagement to actress Lola Castillo (Turner) leads to complications when another man brings her home from the theater. Lopez brands her with his cigarette and stabs her escort, Captain Alvarez (Payne). He then escapes into the mountains and becomes a leader of a band of brigands. Lola obtains a divorce and marries Captain Alvarez. Lopez, seeking revenge, sends his men to abduct Lola, but they bring her younger sister Maria (Ward) instead and Lopez rapes her. She returns to the town and dies a year later, leaving a baby which is exchanged by a nurse for a child of Lola's that dies at birth. Five years later, Lopez surrounds their home and takes Captain Alvarez and the child prisoner, and then orders them shot. He locks himself in a room with Lola. When the nurse confesses the truth of the child's paternity and the police are surrounding the villa, Lopez leaves and sacrifices himself by interjecting himself as the bandits are shooting at Alvarez and his son.
. Daisuke Miyao. Sessue Hayakawa: Silent Cinema and Transnational Stardom. March 28, 2007. Duke University Press. 978-0-8223-3969-4. 316.