We_Americans

<i>We Americans</i>

We Americans

1928 film


We Americans is a 1928 American silent drama film directed by Edward Sloman and starring George Sidney, Patsy Ruth Miller, and George J. Lewis.[1][2] An extremely slender young Andy Devine plays an early small role as Pat O'Dougal.

Quick Facts We Americans, Directed by ...

Plot

Two young couples try to cross the mixed ethnic divide in America, something which is only resolved when World War I reveals the truth of American society's melting pot.

Cast

Production

Producer Carl Laemmle Jr. purchased the film rights to the play We Americans in support of the efforts of Will H. Hays, head of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, to further the more rapid Americanization of immigrants within the United States.[3] Hays organized a group of experts to advise director Sloman on the film.[3] The initial outline for the film had immigrants from Russia settling in the United States but maintaining their native language and customs, while their children became assimilated through attended American high school, with the resulting family conflict.

Preservation

With no prints of We Americans located in any film archives,[4] it is a lost film.


References

  1. Erens p. 96
  2. "Aid of Americanization Experts Secured by Hays for Universal's We Americans". Universal Weekly. 25 (20). New York City: Motion Picture Weekly Publishing Company: 13. 25 June 1927. Retrieved 30 October 2023.

Bibliography



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