Menu
Director
John Ford
Credits
Producer: John Ford. Writers: Philip Klein, Marion Orth, Malcolm Stuart Byrne, Brian Oswald Donn-Byrne
Principal Cast
Victor McLaglen, June Collyer, Earle Foxe, Larry Kent
Category
Feature
After the entertaining but lightweight The Shamrock Handicap, Hangman’s House is a revelation, one of the great late silent films to rank alongside the finest work of Victor Sjöström, Alfred Hitchcock and F. W. Murnau. Its dreamy landscapes and sinuous tracking shots recall the Murnau of Sunrise and may even have recycled some of the sets constructed for that film at Fox; but these elements are used for very distinctive Irish purposes in a story of oppression and revenge, of romance thwarted and finally fulfilled. A youthful and handsome Victor McLaglen stars in his second role for Ford after several years of work in his native England and the mix of McLaglen, landscape, love and horse-racing looks ahead to The Quiet Man. So too does the presence of a certain vigorous extra in the cheering crowd at the race: an unmistakable John Wayne, who had recently been taken on by Ford as a lowly assistant around the studio.
Notes by Charles Barr
80 minutes, USA, 1928, B&W
ARCHIVE AT LUNCHTIME: BRITISH & IRISH (PROGRAMME 2) 12.50
CROSSING 15.20, 20.55
HEART OF AN OAK 18:00
LA CHIMERA 20.30
SHAYDA 13.00 (OC), 18.00
SLEEP 13.15
THAT THEY MAY FACE THE RISING SUN 18.30
THE COMMANDANT’S SHADOW 13.40
THE CONVERSATION 50TH ANNIVERSARY 4K RESTORATION 16.00
The IFI is supported by The Arts Council