Flaming Love
{{short description|1925 film}}
{{Use American English|date=September 2021}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Flaming Love
| image = Flaming Love (1925) - 1.jpg
| caption = Advertisement
| director = Victor Schertzinger
| producer =
| writer = Lois Zellner
| story = J.K. McDonald
| starring = Eugene O'Brien
Mae Busch
Ben Alexander
| cinematography = Chester A. Lyons
George Richter
| editing = Beth Matz
Robert R. Snody
| studio = J.K. McDonald Productions
| distributor = First National Pictures
| released = {{film date|1925|01|04|United States}}
| runtime = 80 minutes
| country = United States
| language = Silent
English intertitles
}}
Flaming Love, also known as Frivolous Sal, is a 1925 American silent Western film directed by Victor Schertzinger for First National Pictures.{{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/410884028/?terms=%22flaming%2Blove%22%2Bschertzinger|title=Flaming Love a Prairie Blaze of Thrilling Action|last=Spain|first=Mildred|date=January 19, 1925|work=The New York Daily News|access-date=January 18, 2019}}[http://silentera.com/PSFL/data/F/FrivolousSal1925.html Progressive Silent Film List: Frivolous Sal] at silentera.com The film involves a female saloon owner in the Old West, her weak-willed new actor husband, and his young son from a previous relationship.
Plot
As described in a review in a film magazine,{{cite journal |last=Waller |first=Tom |author-link= |title=Frivolous Sal; Western Melodrama with a Wonderful Background and Abundance of Thrills Has Good Cast |journal=The Moving Picture World |volume=72 |issue=3 |pages=269–270 |publisher=Chalmers Publishing Co. |location=New York City |date=17 January 1925 |url=https://archive.org/details/movingpicturewor72janf/page/269/mode/1up |access-date=20 July 2021}} when Roland Keene's wife dies, he goes West with a theatrical troupe, leaving his young son Benny (Alexander) in New York. In Placer Valley he meets Sal Flood (Busch), owner of a saloon she inherited from her father. Benny arrives in Placer Valley just in time to witness his father marrying Sal. Roland takes over running the saloon and is being milched by Osner (Lewis), a professional gambler, when Steve McGregor (Santschi), a friend of Sal, intervenes. After a bloody fight, Steve whips the gambler. Sal then takes over the saloon. To meet his gambling debts, Roland is compelled by Osner to open the saloon's safe, which has Steve's gold. When the safe is opened, Benny through a window sees Osner taking the metal. The building is blasted by Osner, and Benny is injured by debris from the building. Benny shields his father when the Sheriff investigates, and Roland sets out to get Osner and return the gold. Osner flees to a tram car, and Roland jumps on it as it begins to travel down from one mountain and then up the next slope. In mid-air he succeeds in spilling Osner to freefall from the tram car to some tree tops far below, but then Roland loses his own grip to luckily land safely on a sandy bank.
Cast
{{Cast listing|
- Eugene O'Brien as Roland Keene
- Mae Busch as Sal Flood
- Ben Alexander as Benny Keene
- Tom Santschi as Steve McGregor
- Mitchell Lewis as Osner
- Mildred Harris as Chita
}}
Production
The film was partially shot in Mount Rainier National Park in northwest Washington.{{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/380644024/?terms=%22frivolous%2Bsal%22%2Bschertzinger|title=McDonald at Mount Ranier|date=September 5, 1924|work=The Los Angeles Times|access-date=January 18, 2019}} Schertzinger and his crew of 38 arrived at the park in mid-August and stayed through early September, lodging at the Paradise Inn. The story was based on experiences that writer-producer J.K. McDonald had working in the logging and mining camps in the Pacific Northwest.{{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/204207216/?terms=%22frivolous%2Bsal%22%2Bschertzinger|title=McDonald Has Become One of First National Independent Producers|last=Jungmeyer|first=Jack|date=October 26, 1924|work=The Battle Creek Enquirer|access-date=January 18, 2019}}
Reviews noted the amount of drinking that takes place during the film, which is set in a time prior to Prohibition's ban on alcoholic drinks in 1920.
Preservation
With no prints of Flaming Love / Frivolous Sal located in any film archives,[https://memory.loc.gov/diglib/ihas/loc.mbrs.sfdb.5482/ Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Database: as Frivolous Sal] it is a lost film.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{commons category|Flaming Love}}
- {{IMDb title|0015821}}
{{Victor Schertzinger}}
Category:Films directed by Victor Schertzinger
Category:First National Pictures films
Category:1925 Western (genre) films
Category:Silent American Western (genre) films
Category:1920s English-language films
Category:English-language Western (genre) films
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{{US-silent-Western-film-stub}}