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Suggestions of similar film to Where the Breakers Roar
There are 185 films with the same actors, 309 films with the same director, 70493 with the same cinematographic genres (including 7524 with exactly the same 2 genres than
Where the Breakers Roar), to have finally
70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked
Where the Breakers Roar, you will probably like those similar films :
, 12minutes
Directed by D. W. GriffithOrigin USAGenres DramaActors Linda Arvidson,
Marion Leonard,
Kate Bruce,
Gladys Egan,
Mack Sennett,
Florence LawrenceRating45%
Judge Mowbray sentences a man, at which a gypsy woman protests. The Judge later goes home and sees his wife and daughter. However the gypsy woman breaks into his house. She knocks out Mrs. Mowbray, gags her and ties her to a chair. She sets up a gun to shoot her dead when the door is opened. However the daughter wakes up and is able to tell her father, who saves his wife, and the gypsy woman is arrested., 12minutes
Directed by D. W. Griffith,
Gottfried Wilhelm "Billy" BitzerOrigin USAGenres Drama,
ThrillerActors Arthur V. Johnson,
Linda Arvidson,
Gladys Egan,
Charles InsleeRating56%
On a beautiful summer day a father and mother take their daughter Dollie on an outing to the river. The mother refuses to buy a gypsy's wares. The gypsy tries to rob the mother, but the father drives him off. The gypsy returns to the camp and devises a plan. They return and kidnaps Dollie while her parents are distracted. A rescue crew is organized, but the gypsy takes Dollie to his camp. They gag Dollie and hide her in a barrel before the rescue party gets to the camp. Once they leave the gypsies and escapes in their wagon. As the wagon crosses the river, the barrel falls into the water. Still sealed in the barrel, Dollie is swept downstream in dangerous currents. A boy who is fishing in the river finds the barrel, and Dollie is reunited safely with her parents., 13minutes
Directed by D. W. GriffithOrigin USAGenres DramaActors Arthur V. Johnson,
Owen Moore,
Mack Sennett,
Robert Harron,
Herbert Yost,
John R. CumpsonRating57%
John Wharton, the husband of a true and trusting wife and father of an eight-year-old girl, through the association of rakish companions becomes addicted to the drink habit, and while the demon rum has not fastened its tentacles firmly, there is no question that given free rein the inevitable would culminate in time. Arriving home one afternoon in a wine besotted condition, he is indeed a terrifying spectacle to his little family. Later, after he has slept off the effects to some extent, while at supper, the little girl shows him two tickets for the theater, begging him to take her. After some persuasion he consents to go. The play is a dramatization of Émile Zola's L'Assommoir, which shows how short a journey it is from peace and happiness to woe and despair by the road of rum. At the final curtain of the play, he is a changed man, going homeward with a firm determination that he will drink no more, which he promises his wife upon his return. Two years later we find the little family seated, happy and peaceful, at the fireside and we know that the promise has been kept.