The Vision - Production & Contact Info (original) (raw)
The story, credited to Arthur Maude, and suggested to him by Sir John Millais' painting, "Speak. Speak!" lends itself particularly well to the remarkable color effects produced by the Technicolor process. As to the story itself, it ...See moreThe story, credited to Arthur Maude, and suggested to him by Sir John Millais' painting, "Speak. Speak!" lends itself particularly well to the remarkable color effects produced by the Technicolor process. As to the story itself, it concerns a vision which appears to Edgar Graythorpe, sick and confined to his home at Roxton Castle; and alone with the exception of one servant. Graythorpe's queer actions - his conversations with someone unseen - have led the other servants to leave. Millais visits him and while there, the "Vision" again appears to Graythorpe. And then - the story unfolds - telling of a thwarted romance between Lucy Cludde and Charles de Lacey, and de Lacey's subsequent assassination at the hands of another suitor favored by Lucy's father. Pursued by the rival suitor, Lucy takes her life by leaping over a high cliff. Her spirit is the vision which appears to Graythorpe at intervals - and will continue to appear - until Graythorpe, who along with Roxton Castle has inherited the spirit of de Lacey - joins her. This is all revealed to Graythorpe by an old diary. Graythorpe dies and the two spirits meet. Written by Motion Picture News, May 22, 1926 See less