Regeneration

Release Date:  12/25/1923
Genre:  Action/Drama
Rating:  NR
Director:  Richard E. Norman
Studio(s):  Norman Film Mfg. Co.
B&W
Silent

Cast:  Stella Mayo (Violet Daniels), M.C. Maxwell (Jack Roper), Alfred Norcom, Charlie Gaines, R.L. Brown, Clarence Rucker, Steve Reynolds.

Story:  After a widowed sea captain dies he leaves his only daughter, Violet Daniels, a map detailing the location of buried treasure on an unknown south seas island.  Violet and Jack Roper leave on his fishing schooner, the “Anna Bell,” to find the treasure. During the voyage the ship’s mate, Knife Hurley, attempts to steal the map and there is a fight involving the crew he has recruited from the scum of the waterfront. The ship is set on fire, and Knife escapes in the only lifeboat with the map and his crew. Violet and Jack are left to die on the burning boat, however, they survive on a raft they build and after days of drifting, hungry and thirsty, they arrive at an uninhabited island. They name the island Regeneration and begin life anew. Sometime later, Knife and his crew land on Regeneration, which turns out to be the island on which the treasure is buried.  Eventually Knife is defeated.

Notes:  Contemporary information about the exact conclusion of the film has not been located. The movie was a hit, not just with black audiences but with white patrons, too, as a benefit from director and founder of Norman Studios, Richard E. Norman’s unique promotional methods. In particular, Norman encouraged theaters to fill their lobbies with sand to draw potential customers in. Unfortunately, no known full copies of Regeneration exist. However, Kino Lorber restored an 11-minute portion of the second reel, archived in the Library of Congress, though video remains largely obscured by nitrate decomposition.  Sources:  tcm.com, daaracarchive.org.  Photos:  imdb.com.

Preview Clip

The Green-Eyed Monster

Release Date:  1919
Genre:  Action
Black & White
Silent
Studio(s):  Norman Film Manufacturing Company
Running Time: 50 mins.

Cast:  Jack Austin, Louise Dunbar, Steve Reynolds, Robert A. Stuart

Story:  “The plot deals with the eternal triangle, two men in love with one girl, but the undercurrents bring in the interesting factor of two rival railroads and their fight for supremacy. Before the Government assumed chaperonage over the arteries of travel and transportation and when two roads ran on different routes to the same specific point, there was a rivalry between them as to which should carry the Government Fast mail. In order to ascertain the fastest of these, a race is run – and it was by winning this race that the hero also won the hands of his sweetheart. $10,000 worth of railroad equipment was used and an $80,000 train wreck is part of the story.”

Notes:  The Norman Film Mfg. Co. was located in Jacksonville, FL. Publicity for this film stated, “There is not a white man in the cast, or is there depicted in the entire picture anything of the usual mimicry of the Negro. This photoplay has been indorsed [sic] by the most prominent colored people of America.” The publicity also stated that an $80,000 train wreck was filmed. A lobby card stated, “The characterizations in this spectacular production were enacted by colored people, chosen from many different walks of life. The Lawyer, Doctor, Banker and finished actor and actress portray this story which in a subtle way suggests the advancement of the colored race along educational and financial lines.”

Details:  Silent filmmaker Richard Norman first found success with local productions of a film called The Wrecker, featuring white casts living and working in the Midwestern and Southern towns he visited during the late 1910s. During this period, he lived and worked for a time in Chicago, home to a bustling community of African American artists, musicians and filmmakers – including one Oscar Micheaux, widely regarded as the father of black film.  Having befriended Micheaux (at least via letters) and intrigued by the niche market potential of “race films” starring black actors playing all roles – heroes and villains, alike – Norman set about a new genre of film. He took a chance on the localized successes of The Wrecker, retooled the script, hired an all-black cast and produced The Green Eyed Monster in 1919.

It was a bit of a risk that initially proved a failure. African American audiences responded favorably to the dramatic story of racial uplift and achievement expressed in the film, but were unimpressed with the new comedic elements. So, Norman headed back into the editing room, cutting the comedic elements and remixing them into their own slapstick romantic comedy called The Love Bug. In 1920, he re-released The Green Eyed Monster as a dramatic film and often screened The Love Bug as a pre-feature extra. The combination proved successful.

In fact, so successful was The Green Eyed Monster in distribution that George P. Johnson of the Lincoln Motion Picture Co., a contemporary of Norman Studios also producing race films, called it the “most sensational negro film made.”  “Sensational” certainly is an apt description. The Green Eyed Monster centers on a passionate love triangle and a cut-throat competition between two train companies to land a high-dollar mail contract. Scenes included a rescue from burning car, fist fights, a pistol duel, an abduction, a locomotive chase, and a violent train wreck reported to cost $80,000 to produce – a fortune in those days. The Green Eyed Monster also was the film debut for Steve “Peg” Reynolds, the longtime friend and “one-legged marvel” who would appear in all of Norman’s race films and accompany him to promote film premieres.

Unfortunately, no known clips of the film survive.  Source(s):  daaracarchive.org; tcm.com; normanstudios.org.