The Million Dollar Mystery

The Million Dollar Mystery is a 23-chapter film serial released in 1914, directed by Howell Hansel, and starring Florence La Badie and James Cruze. It is presumed lost.[2]

The Million Dollar Mystery
Brochure for Episode 3 featuring
actor James Cruze
Directed byHowell Hansel
Written byLloyd Lonergan
Harold McGrath
Produced byCharles J. Hite
StarringFlorence La Badie
Marguerite Snow
James Cruze
Frank Farrington
Sidney Bracey
Lila Chester
CinematographyGeorge Webber
Distributed byThanhouser Film Corporation
Release date
  • June 22, 1914 (1914-06-22)
Running time
690 minutes
(23 chapters)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$125,000 approx.[1]
Box office$1,500,000[1]

Plot

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A prologue for The Million Dollar Mystery introduced the characters and groups. After the opening title card shows "hundreds of hands" grasping for the money and then a shot of the check for $10,000 the solver of the mystery is shown prior to the beginning of the first reel. Baby Florence is left at a boarding school with a note and half a bracelet instructing that her father will come to take her back upon her eighteenth birthday. Hargreaves, here played by Alfred Norton, is chased by the Black Hundred, but he receives a note and money before attempting to escape by balloon on the top of a building. The balloon is shot down and the first chapter ends.[3]: 1183 

Cast

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Important figures cast in scenes included William Montagu, 9th Duke of Manchester.[3]: 883  The Duke of Manchester was cast in a scene aiding Florence in escaping from Countess Olga and her "band of conspirators".[5]: 482 

Filming and $10,000 prize

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Filmed in New Rochelle, New York, The Million Dollar Mystery was produced by Thanhouser Film Corporation and was that company's biggest success, largely due to the popularity of La Badie, who performed her own stunts. Publicity gimmicks, including a monetary prize to anyone who submitted the best idea for a conclusion to the serial, were used to boost the serial's success. The Million Dollar Mystery was the new serial project from the Chicago Tribune following the success of The Adventures of Kathlyn.[1] The serial was released with the gimmick that the last chapter was unwritten. Twenty-two chapters were written based only on the title, while the serial was left purposefully unfinished with no final chapter.

A prize of $10,000 was offered for the best suggestion (advertised as "$10,000 for 100 words").[2] Thousands of letters were received by Thanhouser in response to this promotion, and Ida Damon, a secretary in St. Louis, Missouri, won the prize.[1][6] In a further publicity stunt, the character Florence Hargreaves was actually reported missing. Details of the plot were fed to newspapers and the police as if they were real events. Seven days passed before this story was exposed as fiction.[1]

Chapter titles

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"Letters begin to form on the blank sheet"
  1. The Airship in the Night
  2. The False Friend
  3. A Leap in the Dark
  4. The Top Floor Flat
  5. At the Bottom of the Sea
  6. The Coaching Party of the Countess
  7. The Doom of the Auto Bandits
  8. The Wiles of a Woman
  9. The Leap from an Ocean Liner
  10. The Elusive Treasure Box[7]
  11. In the Path of the Fast Express
  12. (Unknown)
  13. (Unknown)
  14. (Unknown)
  15. The Borrowed Hydroplane
  16. Drawn Into the Quicksand
  17. A Battle of Wits
  18. (Unknown)
  19. (Unknown)
  20. (Unknown)
  21. (Unknown)
  22. The Million Dollar Mystery
  23. The Mystery Solved

SOURCE:[2]

Production notes

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  • The story was written by Harold MacGrath; the scenario (script) by Lloyd Lonergan.[3]: 176 
  • The house of Francis Wilson was purchased for use in the production and would also be the meeting location of the final details surrounding the release by the members of the Thanhouser Company.[3]: 338  The historic Francis Wilson house was known as the "house of mystery" in the production. Lonergan insisted that Thanhouser Company president Charles J. Hite acquire the house for the production, but attempts to rent the house for the production failed after the plans to use the grounds for "balloonists, soldiers and the actors for several months".[5]: 386  Hite would provide the $200,000 for its purchase and the house was quickly made ready for the production.[3]: 884 [5]: 386  In a tour of the house, a Motion Picture News writer declared "is furnished in keeping with the imposing exterior of the mansion. Priceless Persian rugs carpet the entrance hall. In the dining-room heavy carved furniture groan under the weight of the silver service and in every room on the three floors it is apparent that exceptionally good taste has been used in the selection of the works of art which eventually will be seen in the completed film, "The Million-Dollar Mystery."[3]: 884 
  • Other sets used by the Thanhouser company included libraries stocked with real books and a Tudor staircase removed from an English country home.[3]: 883  Costume costs for the production were noted to be quite high, with Marguerite Snow's costume bills reaching over $2000, although she only acted in six of the 46 reels. Florence La Badie's costumes, at least according to studio press releases, cost $10,000.[3]: 1101  Publicity also claimed some of the costumes were designed by the couturier Lady Duff Gordon (Lucile) [8] A walking staff once worn at the Russian court was given to Snow by Colonel Sandor Radanivich, said staff was claimed to be over fifty years old and displays iridescence when held up to the light.[3]: 1180 
  • For the production of the underwater scene, Carl Gregory was reported to have sailed to the Bahamas.[3]: 258  John Ernest Williamson used his father's invention to allow for the first underwater films to be shot. For the scene, Gregory was lowered into the ocean depths in a unique diving bell-like apparatus and shoots the film with lighting aid provided by the mothership.[5]: 382 
  • Another scene was done with the permission of the White Star Line and it involved a steamer unloading and a watchman's shanty at the edge of a pier on the Hudson River.[3]: 1180 
  • One stunt performed in the serial’s first episode or “chapter” ended in near tragedy. During production a professional aeronaut assisted Albert Norton in the balloon escape from the roof of a building. Danson Michell of The Motion Picture News reported that "Norton narrowly escaped losing his life in this attempt."[3]: 1183 

Publicity

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Motion Picture News reported that the meeting to finalize the arrangements regarding the serialization of the story in the Chicago Tribune would take place on April 10, 1914 between Thanhouser Company president Charles J. Hite, Harold MacGrath the novelist and Joseph Medill Patterson of Chicago Tribune.[3]: 119  More than 200 different papers, including the Chicago Tribune would begin serialization of the story on June 28.[3]: 328 

The famous detective William J. Burns would also become a part of the fervor surrounding The Million Dollar Mystery and published his insights into solving the mystery in The Movie Pictorial.[4]: 189 

Release

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The serial was publicly released through Syndicate Film Corporation, although company executives allowed some film exhibitors (theater owners) and friends to view the first two reels of The Million Dollar Mystery in advance.[3]: 250  That early viewing, attended by about a 200 viewers, was authorized in part by F. P. Glenn of the Syndicate Film Company.[3]: 1099 

The serial as a whole is now considered to be a lost.[2]

Sequel and remake

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  • The serial was highly successful and the stockholders received a return of 700% on their investment, receiving $1.5M at the box office for a cost of $125,000 "or so."
  • As a result, another serial already in production was changed to become a sequel to The Million Dollar Mystery. The serial Zudora was renamed The Twenty Million Dollar Mystery and changes were made to the plot halfway through its release. It was not, however, as successful as its predecessor.[1]
  • In June 1918, The Million Dollar Mystery was re-edited to six reels and released as a feature film through Arrow Film Corporation.
  • The serial was condensed and remade in 1927 as a feature-length silent film starring James Kirkwood.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Stedman, Raymond William (1977). "Drama by Installment". Serials: Suspense and Drama By Installment. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 14& 22. ISBN 978-0-8061-1695-2.
  2. ^ a b c d "Progressive Silent Film List: The Million Dollar Mystery". Silent Era. Retrieved 2008-02-18.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Motion Picture News (Apr - Jul 1914) (Apr - Jun 1914)". New York, Motion Picture News. 1914. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1914-Jan 1915) (Aug 1914-Jan 1915)". The Motion Picture Publishing Co. 1915. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Motography (Jan-Jun 1914) (Jan-Jun 1914)". Electricity Magazine Corp. 1914. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  6. ^ Lahue, Kalten C. "1. A Bolt From The Blue". Continued Next Week. p. 6.
  7. ^ Eckel Theatre Weekly Program, week commencing Sept. 7, 1914, Syracuse, NY
  8. ^ Gastonia Gazette, Sept. 22, 1914)
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