A wealthy and powerful industrialist changes his identity to avenge himself on the wife that spurned him on their wedding night.A wealthy and powerful industrialist changes his identity to avenge himself on the wife that spurned him on their wedding night.A wealthy and powerful industrialist changes his identity to avenge himself on the wife that spurned him on their wedding night.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Claud Allister
- Fred Wyndham
- (as Claude Allister)
Nicholas Bela
- Undetermined Role
- (uncredited)
Carrie Daumery
- Dowager at Dress Salon
- (uncredited)
Neal Dodd
- Wedding Celebrant
- (uncredited)
Mary Foy
- Marie - Elinor's Maid
- (uncredited)
Paul Porcasi
- Monsieur Durand
- (uncredited)
Rolfe Sedan
- Charity Bazaar Auctioneer
- (uncredited)
Featured review
Catherine Dale Owen is wed to one of the richest men in the world. He settles five million pounds on her. And she runs away before the marriage can be consummated, because he's a bearded hunchback who, she says, thinks of nothing but money. He arranges with his secretary and friend Albert Conti for a lot of cash, gets on a plane and jumps.... with a parachute. Next he goes to renowned plastic surgeon Bela Lugosi, and has his spine straightened, his features alerted, and his beard shaved off. Now he is Warner Baxter. He starts cutting a swath in Paris under a new name, whence Miss Owen has gone. Naturally she falls in love with him.
This was Kenneth Hawks' last film. He died in an airplane crash before it was finished shooting, and the movie was released with no director credited. Although there is a good role for Hedda Hopper as Miss Owen's mercenary sister, married contemptuously to Claude Allister, whose uncle refuses to die and leave them wealthy and titled, I found the movie annoying in its idea that it's Baxter who has changed in character, and that has made all the difference.
The copy that I looked at was, like many Fox films of the era, in very poor condition.
This was Kenneth Hawks' last film. He died in an airplane crash before it was finished shooting, and the movie was released with no director credited. Although there is a good role for Hedda Hopper as Miss Owen's mercenary sister, married contemptuously to Claude Allister, whose uncle refuses to die and leave them wealthy and titled, I found the movie annoying in its idea that it's Baxter who has changed in character, and that has made all the difference.
The copy that I looked at was, like many Fox films of the era, in very poor condition.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe making of this film ended in appalling tragedy: On January 2, 1930, at Santa Monica, with the film already completed, director Kenneth Hawks embarked on a series of retakes for a flying scene with which he was dissatisfied. The scene was to have been based off the disappearance of Alfred Loewenstein, a Belgian financier, from a plane crossing the English Channel on July 4, 1928. Two airplanes carrying the film crew to photograph a third that features in the film collided in the air, burst into flame, and hurtled into the Pacific Ocean off the Southern California coast below. Ten people were killed in the accident, including director Hawkes, along with assistant director Max Gold and four cameramen - George Eastman, C. Otho Jordan, Conrad Wells, and Ben Frankel - as well as two property men, and the two pilots. A third pilot, Roscoe Turner, two other crew members, and the stunt performer designated to do the parachute jump doubling for the lead character were unharmed in the accident, as they were directly below the collision and swerved a safe distance away from the burning flames resulting from the crash. Three bodies were hurled out of the planes and into the sea below. Hoot Gibson witnessed the crash from on the shore, and Turner saw the crash from his plane. Turner, who was good friends with Hawks, reportedly "cried like a child" in the aftermath of the accident, and claimed that his only explanation was that one or both of the pilots had been blinded for a moment by the glare of the sun, which might have caused the fatal collision. Hawks' brother, Howard, was going to board the plane with him, but backed out at the last second on a "whim". An excessive search for the bodies was conducted; only five were recovered. Kenneth Hawks was cremated and his ashes were scattered over the site of his death.
- Crazy creditsNo director is listed in the credits; the actual director Kenneth Hawks was killed in a midair collision along with nine other crewmen and pilots during filming.
- ConnectionsReferenced in TopTenz: The 10 Most Dangerous Movie Productions in History (2023)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Mask of Love
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.20 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Such Men Are Dangerous (1930) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer