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Single Handed is a american film of genre Comedy directed by Edward Sedgwick released in USA on 25 march 1923 with Hoot Gibson

Single Handed (1923)

Single Handed
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Released in USA 25 march 1923
Length 50minutes
Directed by
OriginUSA
Genres Comedy,    Crime,    Western

Single Handed is a 1923 silent American Western film directed by Edward Sedgwick and featuring Hoot Gibson.

Actors

Hoot Gibson

(Hector MacKnight)
William Steele

(Windy Smith)
Dick La Reno

(Sheriff Simpel)
Mack V. Wright

(Milo)
Tom McGuire

(Macklin)
Trailer of Single Handed

Bluray, DVD

Streaming / VOD

Source : Wikidata

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Suggestions of similar film to Single Handed

There are 194 films with the same actors, 51 films with the same director, 51703 with the same cinematographic genres (including 33 with exactly the same 3 genres than Single Handed), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.

If you liked Single Handed, you will probably like those similar films :
Hook and Ladder, 1h
Directed by Edward Sedgwick
Origin USA
Genres Western
Actors Hoot Gibson, Frank Beal, Philo McCullough

Ace Cooper, a cowboy who has just arrived in the city, inadvertently gets mixed up in a little misunderstanding between several cowboys and a stockyards cashier in regard to their pay. Ace leaves the premises suddenly with a policeman loping along behind them. Ace crashes the fire lines and in the excitement of a residence fire disguises himself with a fireman's helmet and slicker. The cop loses him in the shuffle and Ace is forced into service by a truck captain who, in the smoke, mistakes him for a fireman. Later the cowboy is recognized at the station and an explanation is necessary. The stockyards affair is settled and Ace is offered a job by the department and decides to join when he sees the captain's good looking daughter. He falls in love with the daughter, but meets with tough opposition in the person of Gus Henshaw, a young ward healer and protégé of Big Tim O'Rourke, the city's political boss. Affairs reach a crisis when Henshaw, curbed by O'Rourke, arranges a plan to get even with O'Rourke and settle the affair between the cowboy and Sally Drennan, the fireman's daughter. He lures Sally to the O'Rourke home with a false letter and locks them in a room together and then telephones Ace at the fire station. In a fight with O'Rourke's butler, an ash tray is spilled and a fire is started. The big climax of the story is reached in the burning of the O'Rourke mansion—one of the most spectacular fire scenes ever filmed and the cowboy proves that the training which brought him such sore muscles and the other firemen so many laughs was far from wasted.