
Not Rated
Perscilla (Zasu Pitts) holds the mortgage on Milt's (Milburn Morante) home but says she will cancel it if Milt will make his son, Ebbie (Billy Franey), marry her. Ebbie refuses and is thrown out. He goes to the big city, saves a banker from being robbed by thugs in a park, and is given a many-jobs job in the bank. He meets and falls in love with Lillian (Lillian Peacock), the banker's daughter. In his night-watchman/janitor job he keeps a gang of safe-crackers from cleaning out the bank, is given a big reward and marries Lillian. He then returns home to spurn Perscilla, pays off the mortgage and demands the best room in the house for he and his bride.
Perscilla (Zasu Pitts) holds the mortgage on Milt's (Milburn Morante) home but says she will cancel it if Milt will make his son, Ebbie (Billy Franey), marry her. Ebbie refuses and is thrown out. He goes to the big city, saves a banker from being robbed by thugs in a park, and is given a many-jobs job in the bank. He meets and falls in love with Lillian (Lillian Peacock), the banker's daughter. In his night-watchman/janitor job he keeps a gang of safe-crackers from cleaning out the bank, is given a big reward and marries Lillian. He then returns home to spurn Perscilla, pays off the mortgage and demands the best room in the house for he and his bride.
Without specific plot details or thematic information for 'His Fatal Beauty,' a definitive political bias cannot be objectively determined, leading to a neutral assessment.
The movie features traditional casting, consistent with the era of its production, and does not exhibit intentional DEI-driven casting or explicit race/gender swaps. The narrative maintains a neutral or positive framing of traditional identities, without explicit critique or central DEI themes.
No specific narrative content or character details were provided for 'His Fatal Beauty', making an evaluation of its LGBTQ+ portrayal impossible. Based on the input, no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes are present.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This 1917 silent film does not appear to be an adaptation of a pre-existing work with established characters or historical figures. Therefore, its characters are original to the film, and no prior canonical gender exists to be swapped.
There is no widely established source material or historical record for the characters of "His Fatal Beauty" (1917) that defines their race, making it impossible to identify a race swap.