Recommendations
Archivist John
Senior Editor

The artistic legacy of Charles Bartlett was forever changed by The Thoroughbred, this cult landmark continues to dictate the rules of its category. We've assembled a sequence of films that complement the tone of The Thoroughbred perfectly.
The vintage appeal of The Thoroughbred to maintain its cult relevance across several decades.
So that he may recover his losses and be able to propose to Angela, Kelso Hamilton has plunged heavily on Union Consolidated. A bear raid on U.C. finds Hamilton in his office feverishly watching the tape, as the shares drop from 50, and he realizes that if it reaches 42 he is wiped out. As the stock touches 47, Hamilton rushes to bis broker, who threatens to sell him out at 42, and pleads with him to no avail. The big board records 42 for U.C. and Hamilton is ruined. News of Hamilton's ruin brings grief to Angela and great shock to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earle, and wild joy to George Carewe, Earle's secretary, who does not love Angela but hopes to make her Mrs. Carewe for the sake of her money. For some years he has been secretly making love to Angela's maid, Jessie Cook. But Carewe's hopes are blasted for Angela offers her fortune to Hamilton to pay his losses. Carried away by her generosity, Hamilton tells her that he loves her and that he will go west and make good. Angela promises to wait. Jessie learns that Carewe has only been playing with her, and she goes to the cottage of her father, Tom Cook. When Cook comes home and learns the cause of Jessie's grief, he starts in a rage for the Earle home. He finds entrance to George Carewe's room and there waits for him. He is discovered by Carewe's valet and in a desperate struggle the valet falls and Cook realizes that he is a murderer. Carewe hides some cards in the pocket of Hamilton's smoking jacket. Carewe accuses him of cheating, insists that he be searched and the evidence is so plain that Mr. Earl insists the engagement be broken. Angela pleads for Hamilton and will not believe him guilty. Tom escapes and haunted by the memory of the murdered man, he shaves off his beard and steals away on a freight train. With Angela's promise to wait until his name is cleared, Hamilton goes to the west. Tom Cook gets aboard the brake beams of the Limited on which is Hamilton. The Limited is stopped by bandits a little farther on, and Hamilton, watching his chance, jumps the bandit left and rear guard. They fight desperately. Hamilton's hold is broken and the bandit is about to fire on him, when Cook crawls from under the car and saves the life of Hamilton. Cook tells Hamilton a hard luck story and Hamilton tells him be will give him work when he purchases a ranch. Carewe, rid of Hamilton, presses his suit but is repulsed. Mr. Earle purchases mining property in the Santa Ynez Mountains and persuades all of his friends to invest. This property in the meantime has proven very rich, but the manager, an unscrupulous fellow, and a friend of Carewe's, writes to him that he has reported to Earle very serious conditions at the mine. He also stirs up the Mexican miners so that the stock depreciates in value and sends to Carewe a draft with which to purchase all the stock he can secures as the market falls. Carewe spreads damaging rumors about the stock and buys it in. Earle is blamed by his friends for their losses and with Mrs. Earle, Angela, Carewe. his secretary, and Angela's maid, Jessie, goes to California to make a personal investigation. Meanwhile Hamilton has purchased a fully equipped ranch and endears himself to his employees, especially Cook who would like to clear Hamilton's name but is daunted by his own guilt. A band of cattle rustlers make inroads on Hamilton's herds, and he and his men pursue them into the hills. Earle's party arrive at the mine and they are none too safe, for the manager, to cover his knavery has worked the Mexicans into a frenzy against the head of the company, whom they think has been unjust to them. The party has hardly arrived when they are forced to seek refuge behind barricades in the manager's house. The Mexicans make an attack and a stray shot hits the powder house, which explodes and illuminates the surrounding country. Hamilton and his men hear the explosion, see the reflection of the fire, and anticipating trouble at the mine, ride toward it. The Mexicans succeed in firing the house and the members of the party are about to make a rush when Hamilton and his men arrive. Hamilton, seeing a woman, carries her to safety and finds that he has rescued Angela. Earle extends his hand to thank their rescuer, sees who it is and takes Angela from him, with a word of thanks and good-bye. Cook is almost overcome by the sight of the man whom he thought he had murdered, but whom he had only stunned. He then tells the story that clears Hamilton and demands that Carewe marry Jessie, but Jessie has found a substitute for Carewe's false love in the unselfish love of the valet and Angela and Hamilton are once more united.
Based on the unique cult status of The Thoroughbred, our vault has identified these titles as the most compelling follow-up experiences for fans of cult cinema:
Dir: Charles Bartlett
Oliver Bailey, a substitute for star player Foster Calhoun on the Newbridge College football team, owes a lot of money to gamblers, and in order to repay it he decides to throw an important game. He tricks Calhoun into drinking too much and when Calhoun is unable to play, Bailey is sent in his place. He deliberately throws the game, but the college holds Calhoun responsible for the loss and expels him. Having lost his reputation, his girlfriend and becoming a pariah in town, he turns into a hopeless alcoholic. Traveling west, he hooks up with a dance-hall girl who tricks him into marrying her. However, he soon receives some good news regarding his old school, but it may be too late for him to take advantage of it.
Dir: Charles Bartlett
A likable boy with a proclivity for gambling and fighting, Ben Warman, alienates the owner of a saloon in a Western mining town by helping a girl remove her drunken father from the premises. In so doing he makes a friend of the Woman, a young schoolteacher who makes Ben promise to give up his vices. Their romance is endangered, however, by the arrival of an Eastern girl, who takes a fancy to Ben, and her brother, who falls for the schoolteacher. The Easterners see that the schoolteacher gets false reports of the cause of Ben's fights, and the schoolteacher leaves for the East to study music. The saloon owner, enlisting the aid of an adventuress, hatches a plan to defraud Ben of a mine claim, but the schoolteacher returns in time to foil the scheme and be reunited with Ben.
Dir: Charles Bartlett
Corporal Jack Borden, of the Northwest Mounted Police, trails the man who killed his partner to New York City. The killer is an unscrupulous promoter who is selling worthless stock in a gold mine. Borden, with the help of Blanche Hall, locates the man in a Bowery dive, but he escapes and Borden tracks him back to Canada. Along the way, he discovers that Blanche and his sweetheart, Milly, are long-separated sisters and brings about a reconciliation.
Dir: Charles Bartlett
Bill Brawley, a longshoreman represents the dockworkers in contract talks with their unscrupulous boss, Manson Kenwick, who tells his own sister, Norma, to take Bill's mind off negotiations. Meanwhile, the workers prepare for the waterfront boxing championships. They urge Bill to participate, but when he refuses because he promised Norma that he would not fight, they believe that he has sold out to management. Even Bill's sweetheart, Fen, now afraid of losing him to Norma, cannot convince him to box. On fight night, Bill attends a party at Kenwick's. He learns that Kenwick has persuaded the men to sign a pro-management agreement and also that the fighter for the Kenwick shipyard is injured. Bill rushes to the ring, wins the fight, forces Kenwick into a fairer agreement and tells Fen that he never stopped loving her.
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Analysis relative to The Thoroughbred
| Film Title | Atmosphere | Complexity | Similarity |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Craving | Gritty | High | 88% Match |
| Dangerous Love | Gritty | Layered | 97% Match |
| Tangled Trails | Tense | Layered | 93% Match |
| The Bruiser | Gothic | Linear | 98% Match |
| The Girl Who Doesn't Know | Gothic | Linear | 91% Match |
This guide was algorithmically generated using the cinematic metadata of Charles Bartlett's archive. Last updated: 5/7/2026.
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