Men Who Have Made Love to Me | |
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Directed by | Arthur Berthelet |
Produced by | George K. Spoor |
Written by |
E. C. Lowe Mary MacLane |
Based on |
I, Mary MacLane by Mary McLane |
Starring |
Mary MacLane Ralph Graves Paul Harvey |
Production
company |
Perfection Pictures / Essanay Film Manufacturing Company
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Distributed by | George Kleine System |
Release date
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Running time
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70 minutes (7 reels) |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
Men Who Have Made Love to Me is a 1918 American silent biographical film starring Mary MacLane, based on her book I, Mary MacLane (1917), and directed by Arthur Berthelet.
The film was produced by early American film-maker, George K. Spoor.
The story of six affairs of the heart, drawn from controversial feminist author Mary MacLane's 1910 syndicated article(s) by the same name, later published in book form in 1917. None of MacLane's affairs - with "the bank clerk," "the prize-fighter," "the husband of another," and so on - last, and in each of them MacLane emerges dominant. Re-enactments of the love affairs are interspersed with MacLane addressing the camera (while smoking), and talking contemplatively with her maid on the meaning and prospects of love.
It is not known whether the film currently survives, and Men Who Have Made Love to Me is now thought to be a lost film.