| The Conscience of Hassan Bey | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | |
| Starring | |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 10 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | Silent (Englishintertitles) |
The Conscience of Hassan Bey is a 1913 Americanshortdrama film directed byD. W. Griffith andChristy Cabanne.[1] The film was reissued in 1916.[2]
In Persia, a rug maker's daughter and a young man employed by her father are in love. When the local bey visits the shop to commission a rug, he becomes infatuated with the young woman and later sends his servant, Timur, to bring her to the palace.
At the palace, she rejects the bey's advances, affirming her love for the young man, who has followed her and is quietly admitted by Timur. Timur, who resents the palace favorite, observes the encounter with satisfaction.
Angered by her refusal, the bey orders both the woman and her lover imprisoned in a dungeon with wild animals. Around this time, an Egyptian snake charmer arrives and sells the bey a poisonous viper. At Timur's suggestion, the viper is hidden in the favorite's jewel box. She is bitten and dies. The bey blames the snake charmer.
The woman is brought from the dungeon, but again refuses the bey and collapses. Confronted with her loyalty and his guilt, the bey releases the couple. He then returns to the jewel box, places his hand inside, and is fatally bitten. He dies beside the woman he wronged. Timur later finds his body.[2]
This 1910s short drama film–related article is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it. |