Volume II: Filmography

 

THE BOOMERANG

 

January 7, 1913 (Tuesday)

Length: 1 reel

Character: Drama

Cast: The Thanhouser Monkey (star of the film, according to Thanhouser's advertisements), Eugene Moore

Note: The Boomerang was a popular film title of the era, and similarly-named pictures were made by Nestor (1912), Kalem (1913), Kay-Bee (1913), and Essanay (1913).

 

ADVERTISEMENT, The Moving Picture World, January 4, 1913:

You have had the Thanhouser Kid, the Thanhouser Kidlet, the Thanhouser Twins, and now - the Thanhouser Monkey! He has such intelligence that we don't mind his being featured that way. He is some fine photoplayer! At the center of a real mystery story, he 'stars' acceptably.

 

SYNOPSIS, The Moving Picture World, January 11, 1913:

A dying man confided his little daughter and his fortune to his only relative, a brother. The brother lived in good style, but no one knew that because of reckless speculation he was skating on the edge of financial ruin. He accepted the trust imposed upon him, and really meant to keep it, but a time came when he needed securities to bolster up a stock deal. Fighting his conscience by swearing he would make it good some day he used the gilt edged stocks and bonds of his ward, replacing them with the wildcat securities of his own. Years passed on, and the little girl grew up with the belief that she was penniless and owed everything to the generosity of her uncle. He grew prematurely old and suffered from remorse. Finally when, as he believed the dead appeared and reproached him, he wrote out a full confession, and started to go upstairs, meaning to hand it to the girl, for he did not dare to confess face to face. He was very weak and staggered against the piano in the drawing room as he made his way painfully toward the door. The confession fell into the piano as the writer toppled over to the floor dead.

The widow grudgingly gave a home to her niece, but made her life miserable. One day while the woman was in the drawing room admiring a new piece of jewelry, she was summoned to the telephone in the library. She dropped the jewel on the table, and when she returned her niece was there and the jewel had disappeared. No one but the niece had been in the room, consequently the woman argued, she was the thief, and the gem was on her person or concealed in the apartment. Caring nothing for the disgrace she was bringing upon her own kinswoman the widow summoned the police, and the place was carefully searched. They did not find the jewel, but the confession of her husband's misdeed came to light, and the drudge received the fortune that was rightfully hers. No human being stole the jewel. That was developed later.

 

REVIEW, The Morning Telegraph, January 12, 1913:

On the death of a widower his little child is left in the care of his brother, who is given her inheritance to watch over. But he speculated with it and supposedly lost it all, the daughter never knowing as she grew up that she was an heiress. One day the conscience of the now aged uncle forced him to write a confession, and as he was about to take it to her he staggered and the note fell into the piano in the drawing room. His widow kept the niece grudgingly, and one day happening to drop a piece of jewelry and not finding it, accused the niece of theft. The police were called in, and during the search the confession of the dead uncle was found as well as the jewel. It turned out that the speculations had made good, and thus the girl came into a fortune after all. The story is a logical one.

Note: It is interesting that this review does not mention or allude to the Thanhouser Monkey, which Thanhouser advertised as the star of the film.

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Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.