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The Better 'Ole (1926 film)

The Better 'Ole
Directed by Charles Reisner
Written by Charles Reisner (adaptation)
Darryl F. Zanuck (adaptation)
Robert Hopkins (titles)
Based on The Better 'Ole, or, The Romance of Old Bill
(1918 play)
by Bruce Bairnsfather and Arthur Elliot
Starring Sydney Chaplin
Doris Hill
Harold Goodwin
Jack Ackroyd
Music by Maurice Baron
Cinematography Edwin Du Par
Production
company
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • October 23, 1926 (1926-10-23) (US)
  •  ()
Running time
97 minutes
Country United States
Language Silent (English intertitles)

The Better 'Ole is a 1926 American silent World War I comedy drama film. Released by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., this film is the second full-length film to utilize the Vitaphone sound-on-disc process, two months after the first Vitaphone feature Don Juan; with no audible dialogue, the film does have a synchronized musical score and sound effects. This film was also the second onscreen adaptation of the 1917 musical play The Better 'Ole by Bruce Bairnsfather and Arthur Elliot. Charlie Chaplin's eldest brother Sydney Chaplin played the main lead as Old Bill in perhaps his best-known film today. This film is also believed by many to have the first spoken word of dialog, "coffee", although there are those who disagree. At one point during the film, Harold Goodwin's character whispers a word to Sydney Chaplin which is also faintly heard.

Old Bill (Sydney Chaplin), a jovial Limey sergeant, discovers that the major of his regiment is a German spy in collusion with Gaspard (Theodore Lorch), the local innkeeper. The spies mistrust him and poison his wine; but it spills and eats a hole in the floor through which Gaspard falls into the cellar. Trying to rescue him, Bill discovers a cote of carrier pigeons. Tipped off by the major, the Germans bomb an opera house where Bill and fellow soldier Alf (Jack Ackroyd) are performing; they escape, however, in their impersonation of a horse and later pose as German soldiers in a German regiment. Bill manages to get a photograph of the major greeting the German general, but it falls into the hands of Joan (Doris Hill), a prisoner of war. Bill is forced to join a German attack against the British, and though he saves his own regiment, he is shot as a German spy. An old friend, however, has substituted blank cartridges for the real ones, and Bill is pardoned when Joan and his friend Bert arrive with the incriminating photograph.


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