Blue Jeans (1917 film)

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Blue Jeans is a 1917 American silent drama film, based on the 1890 play Blue Jeans by Joseph Arthur that opened in New York City to great popularity. The sensation of the play was a dramatic scene where the unconscious hero is placed on a board approaching a huge buzz saw in a sawmill, later imitated to the point of cliché.[1][2]

Blue Jeans
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Directed byJohn H. Collins
Written byJune Mathis
Charles A. Taylor
Based onBlue Jeans
by Joseph Arthur
CinematographyJohn Arnold
William H. Tuers
Distributed byMetro Pictures
Release date
  • December 10, 1917 (1917-12-10)
Running time
7 reels (approximately 70 minutes)
CountryUnited States
LanguageSilent (English intertitles)

Prints survive at several archives including the George Eastman House Motion Picture Collection.[3][1]

Lobby card

Plot

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Cast

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Reception

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Like many American films of the time, Blue Jeans was subject to cuts by city and state film censorship boards. For example, the Chicago Board of Censors required a cut of the intertitle "You have transgressed the moral law" etc., the starting of the saw and the laying of the man on the block before it, and three scenes of the man in front of the saw.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Silent Era : Progressive Silent Film List". Silentera.com. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  2. ^ The American Film Institute Catalog Feature Films: 1911-20 by The American Film Institute, c.1988
  3. ^ "Blue Jeans". Lcweb2.loc.gov. January 13, 2018. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  4. ^ "Official Cut-Outs by the Chicago Board of Censors". Exhibitors Herald. 6 (5). New York: Exhibitors Herald Company: 33. January 26, 1918.
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