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The Air Mail

The Air Mail
The Air Mail poster.jpg
Film poster
Directed by Irvin Willat
Produced by Adolph Zukor
Jesse Lasky
Written by Byron Morgan (story)
James Shelley Hamilton (scenario)
Starring Warner Baxter
Billie Dove
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
Cinematography Alfred Gilks
Production
company
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date
  • March 16, 1925 (1925-03-16)
Running time
80 minutes
Country United States
Language Silent film
English intertitles

The Air Mail is a 1925 silent film directed by Irvin Willat and starring Warner Baxter, Billie Dove, and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.. It was produced by Famous Players-Lasky and distributed through Paramount Pictures. Filmed in Death Valley National Park and the ghost town of Rhyolite, Nevada, it was released in the United States on March 16, 1925. Only four of eight reels survive in the Library of Congress.

Russ Kane (Warner Baxter) gets a job as a pilot in order to steal cargo. However, after making a forced landing at a "Ghost City" in the desert, he falls in love with Alice Rendon (Billie Dove) and decides to become law-abiding. When her father (George Irving) needs medicine, he flies to get it, but on the way back is chased by ruffians in other airplanes. As a result, Kane's friend, Sandy (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.), parachutes from Kane's plane with the medicine. Meanwhile, escaped prisoners have invaded Alice's home. All is resolved when a sheriff's posse confronts the invaders, Kane destroys the bandit planes, and Sandy becomes a pilot.

To make the film, the company, Famous Players-Lasky, traveled by train to Beatty, Nevada, about 4 miles (6 km) east of Rhyolite, where it set up temporary headquarters on January 10, 1925. Airplanes used in the film arrived from Reno via Tonopah. The filming was completed by the end of January. During the filming, Famous Players-Lasky restored the Bottle House, one of the deteriorating buildings in the ghost town.

Reviewer Mordaunt Hall, writing for The New York Times in 1925, said that although Dove and Baxter "deliver creditable performances", the story is "only mildly interesting and often quite tedious". While he thought the scenes of planes taking off from the ground were "quite inspiring", he found improbable the stock villains, Deadwood Dick adventures, and romantic conversations between a man at 4,000 feet (1,200 m) in the air and a woman on the ground. "This picture", he concluded, "is interesting because of the modern touch to an ordinary Western story, but the idea deserves to be more thoughtful and sincere."


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