Director: | Ralph Ince |
Producer: | J. Ernest Williamson |
Starring: | Maurice "Lefty" Flynn Jean Tolley Mary MacLaren William Bailey Louis Wolheim |
Cinematography: | J.O. Taylor |
Studio: | Submarine Film Corporation |
Distributor: | Metro Pictures |
Runtime: | 70 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | Silent (English intertitles) |
The Uninvited Guest is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by Ralph Ince, and starring Maurice "Lefty" Flynn, Jean Tolley, Mary MacLaren, William Bailey, and Louis Wolheim. A print of the film exists in the Russian film archive Gosfilmofond.[1]
As described in a film magazine review,[2] while voyaging from Australia to New York City, Olive Granger suffers a shipwreck and manages to reach an island. Two other survivors, Irene Carlton and Fred Morgan, gamblers, steal her credentials and go to the United States, where Irene poses as Olive. The latter is rescued by Paul Patterson, a diver, who has to fight off his partner Jan Boomer for her. Boomer meets his demise in the clutching coils of a giant octopus. Paul and Olive arrive in New York City, expose the imposters, and are wed.
The film was shot partially in the Bahamas and included scenes made using the Williamson underwater camera,[2] and was released by Metro Pictures a few months before the merger that created Metro-Goldwyn. The film had a sequence filmed in Technicolor.[1]