The Million Dollar Handicap Explained

The Million Dollar Handicap
Director:Scott Sidney
Producer:George C. Bertholon
John C. Flinn
Starring:Edmund Burns
Ralph Lewis
Ward Crane
Cinematography:Devereaux Jennings
Studio:Metropolitan Pictures Corporation of California
Distributor:Producers Distributing Corporation
FBO Pictures (UK)
Runtime:60 minutes
Country:United States
Language:Silent (English intertitles)

The Million Dollar Handicap is a 1925 American silent sports drama film directed by Scott Sidney and starring Edmund Burns, Ralph Lewis, and Ward Crane.[1] It is based on the 1902 novel Thoroughbreds by William Alexander Fraser. The film was released in Britain the following year under the alternative title The Pride of the Paddock.

Plot

As described in a film magazine review, John Porter, a Southern horse breeder, is tricked into buying a doped filly named Dixie. His daughter Alis discovers that the horse can actually run. Her sweetheart George Mortimer, a cashier at the bank, shields her brother Alan after the latter embezzles some funds, and George is discharged. Alis' father suffers a paralytic stroke and is in financial difficulties. Alis disguises herself as a jockey and rides her despised horse in a $10,000 handicap race and wins. The excitement of the victory cures the father, her unjustly accused sweetheart George is cleared of any charges, and the two are happy together.

Cast

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Connelly p. 386