The Intrigue is a surviving 1916 silent film drama produced by Pallas Pictures and released through Paramount Pictures. Frank Lloyd directed the film which was written by Julia Crawford Ivers and photographed by her son James Van Trees. The star is young Lenore Ulric and a young unknown King Vidor makes one of his earliest appearances in a film as an actor. The movie is also one of the earliest surviving films of Vidor's wife Florence. Quite fortunately the film is extant at the Library of Congress along with several early Lloyd directed films from 1915/16.
^ The Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Catalog: The Intrigue
^ The Intrigue at silentera.com
^ The American Film Institute Catalog Feature Films: 1911-20 by The American Film Institute, c.1988
^ Catalog of Holdings The American Film Institute and the United Artists Collection at the Library of Congress c.1978 by The American Film Institute
There are 102 films with the same actors, 133 films with the same director, 72910 with the same cinematographic genres (including 8 with exactly the same 4 genres than The Intrigue), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked The Intrigue, you will probably like those similar films :
, 1h40 Directed byFrank Lloyd, George Fitzmaurice OriginUSA GenresDrama, War, Romance ThemesThéâtre, Transport films, Aviation films, Films based on plays ActorsColleen Moore, Gary Cooper, Burr McIntosh, George Cooper, Kathryn McGuire, Eugenie Besserer Rating64% Seven young English aviators are billeted at the Berthelot farm near the French front. One of the flyers, Philip Blythe, falls in love with farmer Berthelot's daughter, Jeannie, and on the morning before a dangerous mission declares his love for her. Philip is shot down, and Jeannie helps an ambulance crew to extricate his apparently lifeless body from the wrecked plane. In the following weeks, Jeannie searches in vain in all of the military army hospitals for Philip. She does encounter Philip's father, who, disapproving of her lowly origins, falsely informs her that Philip has died. In farewell, Jeannie sends a bouquet of lilacs to his room, and Philip, recognizing the flowers as her gift, painfully drags himself to his window in time to call her back to him.