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A Game of Deception (1911) Online

A Game of Deception (1911) Online
Original Title :
A Game of Deception
Genre :
Movie / Romance / Short / Comedy
Year :
1911
Directror :
Harry Solter
Cast :
Florence Lawrence,Arthur V. Johnson
Type :
Movie
Rating :
6.9/10

Misunderstandings abound when a minister's son and an actress become engaged.

A Game of Deception (1911) Online

John Howe, a minister's son, was supposed to be studying hard in New York to enter the ministry. In reality he as "seeing life." His parents, fearing that the might be studying too hard, asked him to return home and rest. Only in the privacy of his room could he indulge in his favorite vices. There his father discovered him reading a novel and smoking a cigarette! John stated to his father that he wished to become a businessman instead of a minister, and when he left home again he had a letter to Henry Lane, a New York businessman. When John arrived at the Lane home, the family hastily put away some cards, drinkables and so on, which they thought might offend the minister's son. Later John had an opportunity to conduct family prayers, after which he returned to his room and yielded to a great desire for a smoke. Then Dorothy Lane received a letter from Janice, an actress, to whom the minister's son was engaged, telling her that she was going to come for a visit. There was a series of ...
Cast overview:
Florence Lawrence Florence Lawrence - The Actress
Arthur V. Johnson Arthur V. Johnson - The Minister's Son


User reviews

Uickabrod

Uickabrod

Cleverness is the quality most apparent in this picture. Just the right amount of burlesquing makes it very amusing. The earnest man and the flippant man will sit side by side watching the picture, and both will laugh with delight, till the earnest man hears the sinner laugh, and then he may be ashamed of himself, for there's a cynical touch in it. It is hypocrisy that is made ridiculous, not things that ought to be reverenced but it is so clever that anyone can easily misunderstand it to suit his own taste. Probably it won't greatly offend anyone; it oughtn't to. Miss Lawrence takes the part of the actress very ably, while Mr. Johnson, in the first scenes, perhaps overdoes his part as the minister's son who is engaged to her; he shouldn't be so awkward. - The Moving Picture World, June 17, 1911