With aid from her police-officer sweetheart, a woman endeavors to uncover the prostitution ring that has kidnapped her sister and the philanthropist who secretly runs it.With aid from her police-officer sweetheart, a woman endeavors to uncover the prostitution ring that has kidnapped her sister and the philanthropist who secretly runs it.With aid from her police-officer sweetheart, a woman endeavors to uncover the prostitution ring that has kidnapped her sister and the philanthropist who secretly runs it.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- The Invalid Inventor - Mary's Father
- (as Wm. Turner)
- William Trubus
- (as Wm. Welsh)
- Mrs. William Trubus
- (as Mrs. Hudson Lyston)
- Bill Bradshaw
- (as Wm. Cavanaugh)
- 'Respectable' Smith
- (as Wm. Burbridge)
- A Country Girl
- (as Laura Huntley)
- The Emigrant Girls' Brother
- (as Wm. Powers)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Speaking of Ince and Barker, they are the ones responsible for the other feature on this 2 DVD set, THE ITALIAN. This 1915 Paramount release about an Italian family's efforts to survive in the New World features George Beban, an actor who specialized in "ethnic" characterizations along with Clara Williams (HELL'S HINGES). They are both quite good giving what for the time were very natural and subdued performances. The ersatz Italian scenery and costumes are quite convincing and once we get to NYC it could almost be a setting out of the Italian neorealist films of the 1940s and 50s. The ethnic style title cards may bother some people today but that's how it was back then. THE ITALIAN is greatly aided by a fine score from Rodney Sauer which helps to enhance the mood generated by this rather downbeat film. Producer Thomas Ince was no stranger to realistic, unhappy endings (DRUMMER OF THE 8TH, CIVILIZATION) making him the flipside of D. W. Griffith and more relevant for a present day audience. Hopefully more of his films will become available so that he will be remembered for something other than his mysterious death in 1924.
The set concludes with three shorts from the Thomas Edison company (1910, 1912, 1915) which are taken from 35mm source materials and look absolutely stunning. They too are accompanied by Rodney Sauer and the Mont Alto orchestra and they nicely round out the set. Once again Flicker Alley has come up with a real winner and a must have for anyone interested in the history of American film. Right now the marriage between Film Preservation Associates and Flicker Alley seems to be a match made in heaven. Here's to a long and successful partnership...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
UPDATE: FPA founder David Shepard died in 2017 but the partnership between his Blackhawk Films and Flicker Alley continues with gratifying results.
- TheCapsuleCritic
- Mar 11, 2025
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDescribing this as the most important film in Universal Picture's history (and Carl Laemmle's) may not be an overstatement. Made for a mere $5,700.00 and tackling the lurid subject of white slavery, this (Universal's first feature length release) earned a whopping $450,000.00 and it put the company squarely on the map.
- Quotes
Newspaper Article: YOUNG GIRL DISAPPEARS. FOUL PLAY SUSPECTED. A pretty little girl employed in well known candy store, reported last night as possibly having fallen into evil hands. Is it possible our candy stores can be used as a market for this infamous traffic?
- Crazy creditsOpening Title Card lists the name of the movie as: Traffic In Souls or While New York Sleeps". Further, it describes the film as "A Photodrama of Today".
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Universal Story (1996)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $5,700 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1