Recommendations
Senior Film Conservator

The artistic legacy of Elmer Clifton was forever changed by The Devil's Apple Tree, the thematic layers of this 1929 classic invite a wider exploration of the genre. This list serves as a bridge to other cult experiences that are just as potent.
The vintage appeal of The Devil's Apple Tree to reinvent the tropes of cult cinema for a global audience.
The Devil's Apple Tree was a significant production in United States, showcasing the immense talent of Dorothy Sebastian, George Cooper, Cosmo Kyrle Bellew. It continues to be a top recommendation for anyone studying cult history.
Based on the unique stylistic flair of The Devil's Apple Tree, our vault has identified these titles as the most compelling follow-up experiences for fans of cult cinema:
Dir: Elmer Clifton
When young inventor Bob Moore fails in his efforts to provide his father, a safe manufacturer, with a lock that is burglar proof, he contacts The "Eel," the most talented safecracker in the city, to offer him a job in his factory. The Eel, deciding to go straight, accepts the offer, but when he later learns that Irene Hardin has been given a valuable necklace by her father, The Eel plans one last job to secure Irene's pearls. Meanwhile, Irene's father, also a safe manufacturer, places the pearls in his own safe and tells Bob that if he can open it, Irene will be his. Bob, in love with Irene, opens the safe and places the pearls on the handle. After he departs, The Eel enters the house and steals the pearls. Bob is accused of the crime, and to exonerate himself, pursues The Eel. After a lively fight, Bob recovers the necklace and returns home to claim his bride.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
Daughter of impoverished vaudeville actor Lew Moore, Sheila ( Dorothy Gish ) works as a waitress in a chocolate manufacturer's candy shop, where she delights the customers with her tomboyish antics. Tom Ballantyne ( Richard Barthelmess ), the proprietor's son realizes that Sheila is excessively fond of dancing, asks her out without the benefit of a proper introduction, and she indignantly refuses. Soon afterwards, however, the two fall in love and secretly marry. Sheila's father insists that Tom's parents be informed, but when the young groom breaks the news, they react with such anger that Tom leaves home. Meanwhile, Sheila remains with the Ballantynes as their ward on the condition that she keep her marriage and her lineage a secret. One evening, Sheila decides to visit her father's theater but is discovered there by the Ballantynes. Infuriated, she vents her anger at the snobbish family and returns home with her father, but Tom follows her, and in the end, all of the parties are reconciled.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
Framed by police inspector Finch and his managing editor, R. H. Steadman, to cover up their own crooked work, reporter John Mull languishes in prison until he escapes, determined to wreak vengeance. In Mull's absence, his sweetheart, Bess Miller, has been dating Burton Grange with whom she plans to elope. When Grange has an altercation with Steadman, in the scuffle, Steadman is knocked unconscious. Grange flees and is arrested for Steadman's murder but escapes and encounters Mull, now a fugitive from justice. After persuading Grange to give himself up, Mull pays a visit to Finch and forces him to confess to Steadman's murder. With Finch's testimony, Mull is also vindicated of charges and is free to marry Bess.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
A young woman is in love, but the man of her affections wants only her and no part of her vast wealth.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
After his mother's death, John Gregory becomes the "Eagle," a thief determined to get even with the mining company that stole his family's fortune. No one suspects that he is a bandit, not even Lucy, the girl he loves, and her brother Bob. John finally breaks into the mining company's main office, but discovers that another robber has preceded him and killed the night guard. The robber is Bob, and when the boy is arrested, John interrupts the trial and takes the blame himself for Lucy's sake. Bob commits suicide, and Lucy, who discovers his written confession just before John is to be hanged, rides wildly to the jail and saves John's life.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
Down on his luck after his discharge from the Armed Services, Henry Warner snatches a gentleman's wallet, then rushes into the home of a wealthy man named Middleton to escape the police. Middleton threatens to expose Henry unless he steals a certain document for him which is hidden in the home of his nephew Craig. Henry traces Craig to the modest abode of Ruth Orton, who has been left penniless by her father's death. Through Ruth, with whom he has fallen in love, Henry obtains an invitation to a reception at which Craig intends to announce his engagement to Ruth. The document in Craig's safe is the late Mr. Orton's will, in which he bequeathed his entire fortune to Ruth, but which Middleton had earlier falsified to his own advantage. Having saved Ruth from the machinations of both crooks, Henry gives her the will with a declaration of his love.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
While relaxing in his cabin one stormy night, John Winton, a rising young businessman who has successfully resisted the institution of marriage, is interrupted by cries for help. Opening his door, he finds a soaking wet, pretty girl, who pleads with him to come to her aid. She guides him to a swamp where a man is lying insensible. John carries the man to his bungalow and goes for a doctor. On his return, both have disappeared. John, his curiosity thoroughly aroused, follows the only clue that has been left to him, a glove that is lying on the cabin floor. After a series of mysterious encounters in which the girl is involved, John marries her without knowing who or what she is. Then it is revealed that the whole mystery has been a scheme contrived by John's father to marry his son off by employing the romance of mystery.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
Boots is a young servant girl who polishes shoes in an English inn. She is an incurable romantic, addicted to melodramatic stories of love and adventure. When she discovers a Bolshevik plot to blow up a government official, she takes it on herself to foil the plot.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
Colonel Court, an agent in the Secret Service, is distressed by the occasional lapses of courage in his son Henry, a college athlete. Unknown to him, Henry's sweetheart Ellen is also an agent working on a case involving a radium smuggler, "National" Jim. To build his son's character, Court puts him on the same case that Ellen has been assigned to, but his courage again fails him. Henry decides to turn to the powers of the psyche and hires three men to communicate power and courage to him through intense concentration. The scheme works: Henry enters Jim's house in time to defeat him in a fight, locate the hidden radium and save Ellen.
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Dir: Elmer Clifton
Two men, one of them a villainous hypnotist, contend for the same woman, unaware that she suffers from dual personality disorder.
View DetailsAnalysis relative to The Devil's Apple Tree
| Film Title | Atmosphere | Complexity | Similarity |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Midnight Man | Surreal | Linear | 87% Match |
| The Hope Chest | Tense | High | 88% Match |
| The Man Trap | Ethereal | Layered | 96% Match |
| I'll Get Him Yet | Gritty | Layered | 98% Match |
| The Eagle | Surreal | Linear | 94% Match |
This guide was algorithmically generated using the cinematic metadata of Elmer Clifton's archive. Last updated: 5/14/2026.
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