The Brass Bowl Explained

The Brass Bowl
Director:Jerome Storm
Screenplay:Thomas Dixon Jr.
Starring:Edmund Lowe
Claire Adams
Jack Duffy
J. Farrell MacDonald
Leo White
Fred J. Butler
Cinematography:G.O. Post
Studio:Fox Film Corporation
Distributor:Fox Film Corporation
Runtime:60 minutes
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

The Brass Bowl is a lost 1924 American mystery film directed by Jerome Storm and written by Thomas Dixon Jr. It is based on the 1907 novel The Brass Bowl by Louis Joseph Vance. The film stars Edmund Lowe, Claire Adams, Jack Duffy, J. Farrell MacDonald, Leo White and Fred J. Butler. The film was released on November 16, 1924, by Fox Film Corporation.[1] [2] [3]

Plot

As described in a review in a film magazine,[4] Dan Maitland (Lowe), an adventurous young wealthy chap, sees a mysterious woman leaving his apartment and finds her fingerprints on a blotter which he covers with a brass bowl. Visiting his lawyer who cautions him about the menace of a noted jewel thief, Dan again sees the young woman and follows her in his car. She meets with an accident and, in helping her, she steals his car. Dan walks to his estate and finds the girl robbing his safe. She mistakes him for the thief who is his double. Accepting the situation and trusting the girl he opens the safe and gives her the jewels. The real thief appears, and Dan captures him after a struggle but he gets away. Then follows a series of exciting situations in which Anisty poses as Maitland, confusing everybody and leading to a variety of complications which are finally straightened out when Maitland succeeds in capturing Anisty after a running fight in the elevators of an office building and declares his love for the girl who confesses she turned thief only to get papers from Maitland that would have in- criminated her father.

Cast

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Brass Bowl (1924) - Overview . TCM.com . December 18, 2018.
  2. Web site: Hans J. Wollstein . Brass Bowl (1924) . AllMovie . December 18, 2018.
  3. Web site: The Brass Bowl . Catalog.afi.com . December 18, 2018.
  4. Sewell . Charles S. . The Brass Bowl; Edmund Lowe’s Second Starring Vehicle for Fox is Corking Good Crook-Mystery- Adventure Story . The Moving Picture World . 71 . 5 . 451–452 . Chalmers Publishing Co. . New York City . 29 November 1924 . 22 June 2021.