• Source: The Reprieve (1913 film)
    • The Reprieve is a 1913 Australian melodrama film directed by W. J. Lincoln about a man on trial for killing his unfaithful wife. It is considered a lost film. Contemporary reviews were positive.


      Plot


      Richard Gannon discovers his wife Amy has been cheating on him with a man called Jim Williams and accidentally kills her in a fit of anger by pushing her over a cliff. He is arrested and sentenced to death but the judge recommends mercy and asks the Home Secretary for a reprieve.
      The Home Secretary at first refuses, but when he mistakenly comes to believe that his own wife is unfaithful with a former lover, he realises how easy it would have been to kill her.
      After this, he grants a reprieve for Gannon and resolves to show his wife more affection.
      The chapter headings were:

      Condemned to Death.
      The Power of Love.
      Leave my House, you Scoundrel.
      Should a faithless woman be destroyed.
      I have killed Her.
      The Vigil of the Night.
      A story that will hold you spell-bound.
      You are no better than Richard Gannon, the man you refuse to reprieve.


      Cast


      Roy Redgrave
      Beryl Bryant
      Godfrey Cass
      George Bryant
      Tom Cannam
      Violet Grey
      Ward Lyons
      Charles Wheeler
      John Brunton
      Jessie Brown


      Production


      The film was the fifth production from Lincoln Cass.


      References




      External links


      The Reprieve at IMDb
      The Reprieve at AustLit
      The Reprieve at National Film and Sound Archive

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