
Extravagance
Summary
A gilded candle burns twice as fast at both ends: Norma Russell, silk-swaddled heiress to a paper empire of IOUs, waltzes through drawing-rooms where champagne flows like meltwater from a glacier of debt. Her father, Courtland, signs his soul in copperplate across a promissory note, then counterfeits the autograph of rubber-baron Robert Mackay, sealing the family’s doom beneath banker Howard Dundore’s wax seal. Dundore—part Midas, part mortician—covets Norma’s porcelain neck more than compound interest; he buys the forgery, pockets the scandal, and demands the bride as penalty. Enter Franklin Hall, rubber-speculating lover, who races back from Amazonian mud to pay the ransom with every ounce of gutta-percha he owns, only to find himself framed for embezzlement by the same creditor who gifted him a desk. A five-year sentence in striped twill, a wife reduced to penning flicker-scenarios for nickels, a broken father playing villains before the crank camera—until an amnesiac ghost named Horace Scott, once Dundore’s loyal ledger-man, is lured back to memory by a flickering screen that restages the crime. The lights come up, the mask slips, the banker flees toward a locomotive graveyard, and destiny switches the tracks. Extravagance ends not with sermon but with the hiss of steam and the click of a projector cooling—fortune’s roulette wheel finally resting on red.
Synopsis
Extravagance has always marked the lives of Norma Russell and her father, Courtland Russell. As a consequence, debt overtakes them, and Russell is forced to borrow a large sum of money from Howard Dundore, the banker. Even this hint of coming trouble does not cause them to economize, and soon Russell has to ask Dundore for an extension of his note. This the banker refuses to do unless the note is accompanied by the signature of a depositor of the bank. Russell forges the name of Robert Mackay, one of the bank's wealthiest depositors. Dundore knows the name is forged, but instructs his confidential man, Horace Scott, to pay the note and subtract it from his private account. He then accuses Russell, and to save her father from the consequences of his forgery Norma is obliged to consent to marry Dundore. She cables her lover, Franklin Hall, a businessman, who has gone to South America to look after a rubber investment, that she cannot marry him. Hall returns at once, pays back the amount of the note, thereby beggaring himself, and marries Norma. Dundore pretends to be friendly to the young couple, tells Hall he knows his investment has gone badly, and offers him a position in the bank, which Hall accepts. Dundore then seizes the opportunity to have Hall's accounts falsified in order to make it appear that he has stolen large sums of money. He continues to call at the Hall's home, and on one occasion makes love to Norma. Hall comes in unexpectedly, the men come to blows, and Dundore accuses Hall of having taken money from the bank. He is arrested, brought to trial and sentenced to five years' imprisonment. The only man who could have testified in his behalf, Horace Scott, has been given money by Dundore, with orders to leave the city. Norma feels that her husband's trouble is a judgment upon herself for her extravagance, since he has always gratified her every wish. Left without means by his imprisonment she turns her talents to scenario writing, at which she is immensely successful. Her father, who has been ousted from his clubs for non-payment of dues, and who lives in a little apartment with his daughter, secures work as a motion picture actor. One evening when they are returning from the studio in the motor car of the director, they see an old man run down by another car. Norma takes the injured man home. When he regains consciousness days later his mind is a blank. During his ravings Norma gleans enough to suspect that he has knowledge of her husband's supposed crime, and tries in every way to bring back his memory. All efforts fail. She takes him to the prison to see her husband, and Hall recognizes him as Scott, but he does not recognize the husband. Norma decides upon an idea, and with the aid of her director carries it out. She writes a scenario embodying the facts in the case of her husband's false accusation, and has it acted for the screen. Then she invites Dundore to see her latest picture at a special showing, and has Scott present. The picture is called "The Banker." As its action progresses there is a shout from the auditorium. Scott jumps to his feet wildly exclaiming: "That's the way he did it; Hall was not to blame. Dundore made me do it." In the ensuing excitement Dundore escapes. He hurries to the railroad station, engages a special and leaves the city, but fate follows him, and he is killed when his engine crashes into a line of "dead" freight cars. Hall is released on the testimony of Scott, whose memory has been brought back by Norma's plan, and Norma and her husband begin life happily once more, both she and her lather having learned a bitter lesson on the folly of extravagance.
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0%Technical
- DirectorBurton L. King
- Year1916
- CountryUnited States
- Runtime124 min
- Rating—/10
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