
Diana Moreland, suspecting that her husband is cheating on her with Marilyn Foster, catches the two of them having a rendezvous at a roadhouse. Instead of screaming at them, she invites Marilyn back to her home.


The hushed, often understated world of silent cinema frequently plumbed the depths of human emotion with a clarity and intensity that modern audiences, accustomed to a cacophony of dialogue and sound, might find surprisingly potent. Among these gems, C. Gardner Sullivan’s Wandering Husbands emerges as a particular...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

William Beaudine

William Beaudine
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" The hushed, often understated world of silent cinema frequently plumbed the depths of human emotion with a clarity and intensity that modern audiences, accustomed to a cacophony of dialogue and sound, might find surprisingly potent. Among these gems, C. Gardner Sullivan’s Wandering Husbands emerges as a particularly incisive, if somewhat melancholic, examination of marital fidelity and the intricate, often cruel, psychological games played when trust erodes. It is a narrative that eschews b..."
George B. French
C. Gardner Sullivan
United States
Drama

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