Search a film or person :
FacebookConnectionRegistration
Bentley's Conscience is a British film of genre Drama directed by Denison Clift with Robert Loraine

Bentley's Conscience (1922)

Bentley's Conscience
If you like this film, let us know!
  • Infos
  • Casting
  • Technical infos
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Film quotes
  • Characters
  • Music
  • Awards
Directed by
Genres Drama

Bentley's Conscience is a 1922 British silent drama film directed by Denison Clift and starring Robert Loraine, Betty Faire and Henry Victor.

Actors

Robert Loraine

(Clive Bentley)
Henry Victor

(Fletcer)
Harvey Braban

(Richard Glym)
J. Fisher White

(John Carson)
Trailer of Bentley's Conscience

Bluray, DVD

Streaming / VOD

Source : Wikidata

Comments


Leave comment :

Suggestions of similar film to Bentley's Conscience

There are 44 films with the same actors, 16 films with the same director, 61579 with the same cinematographic genres, to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.

If you liked Bentley's Conscience, you will probably like those similar films :
Diana of the Crossways
Directed by Denison Clift
Origin United-kingdom
Genres Drama
Actors Fay Compton, Henry Victor, J. Fisher White, Harvey Braban

A sensuous woman trapped in a loveless relationship has an affair with a leading politician which threatens to bring down the government.
A Bill of Divorcement
Directed by Denison Clift
Origin United-kingdom
Genres Drama
Themes Films based on plays
Actors Constance Binney, Fay Compton, Henry Victor, Henry Vibart, Martin Walker

A bill provides that after a certain length of time the wife of a man incurably insane is entitled to a divorce. Meg Fairfield secures a divorce from her husband Hilary, and is about to marry Gray Meredith when Hilary returns cured. Sydney, daughter of Hilary and Meg, is engaged to Kit Pumphrey, son of the parish rector who refuses to permit his son to marry Sydney when he learns her mother is divorced. How Sydney sacrifices everything that her mother may find happiness and remains with her father completes the story.— The Film Daily, (October 15, 1922)