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Just for Her (1911) Online

Just for Her (1911) Online
Original Title :
Just for Her
Genre :
Movie / Short / Drama
Year :
1911
Cast :
William E. Shay,Lucille Young
Type :
Movie
Rating :
6.4/10

Gerald Tompkins and Wilbur Jackson have been friends from youth. They graduate from the same college and are given employment in the same bank. By a strange coincidence, they both love ... See full summary

Just for Her (1911) Online

Gerald Tompkins and Wilbur Jackson have been friends from youth. They graduate from the same college and are given employment in the same bank. By a strange coincidence, they both love Grace Baldwin and become good-natured rivals. Jackson is the favored one and Tompkins is surprised one day when Jackson announces his engagement to Grace in her presence. Gerald pulls himself together and congratulates them, saddened by the blow. Time elapses and Gerald accompanies Wilbur home and the happy husband shows him his baby. Gerald takes the child and congratulates the pair. Jackson lives a fast life, quite beyond his means, and embezzles money from the bank, juggling the figures so as to keep his peculations a secret for a time. At last the officials of the bank become suspicious and meet to examine the books. In the adjoining room Gerald and Wilbur are working. Wilbur is unduly excited and paces the floor. Finally he confesses to his old friend that he has been robbing the bank in a ...
Cast overview:
William E. Shay William E. Shay - Gerald Tompkins
Lucille Young Lucille Young - Grace Baldwin


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An emotional drama of extraordinary power is presented on this film. Its single noticeable defect is in its photography and it is a pity that a picture so well conducted and so effectively acted should be so wanting in pictorial quality, should be so flat. The plot isn't new. Two men working in the same bank love the same girl. The successful one becomes a defaulter and the unsuccessful one shields him because of his wife and child, taking the blame on himself. The defaulter knows the real reason for this act and. as a perfect punishment, it preys on his mind till he goes insane from jealousy and remorse and shoots himself. The innocent man is released and in the end marries the widow. We have seen something of this before, but not so completely nor so effectively. There is nothing in the picture that is not effective except perhaps the very first picture of a college room. The acting of all the play's characters is very remarkable but the scene where the defaulter confesses, the scene in the president's room immediately after, when the hero accuses himself, and the scene where the defaulter hands a confession to his wife that seems half an accusation of her, and then half-mad kills himself stand out clearly. They are wonderful. The effect of the last scenes softens the tragedy and leaves the impression that here is a love well-proved and worthwhile. - The Moving Picture World, August 5, 1911