Flashing Spurs

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Flashing Spurs
Lobby card
Directed byB. Reeves Eason
Written byWilliam Berke
Produced byJesse J. Goldburg
StarringBob Custer
Edward Coxen
Marguerite Clayton
CinematographyWalter L. Griffin
Production
company
Independent Pictures
Distributed byFilm Booking Offices of America
Release date
  • December 14, 1924 (1924-12-14)
Running time
50 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguagesSilent
English intertitles

Flashing Spurs is a 1924 American silent Western film directed by B. Reeves Eason and starring Bob Custer, Edward Coxen, and Marguerite Clayton, who has a dual role of twin sisters.[1][2] A Texas Ranger investigates a woman he believes is mixed up with a gang of outlaws.

Plot

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As described in a review in a film magazine,[3] while following a clue, Sargent Stuart (Custer) of the Rangers goes to the city and has a fight with two thugs, Frazier (Bennett) and Scarbee (Hayes), and is overpowered. He makes an escape by crawling into the window of the room of Rena Holden (Clayton), and is impressed by her. Returning later, he finds that she is gone and a letter indicates she is a crook, a member of Steve Clammert's (Coxen) gang, which is planning to rob miner John Holden (Malan). Stuart goes to the mine and sees Ruth Holden (Clayton) and, believing her to be her twin sister Rena, denounces her. Clammert's gang captures him and prepares to kill him when the side of a hill is blown up, but the explosive misfires and he survives. John and Rena, who is masquerading as Ruth, rescue him, and she confesses the plot. They arrive at Clammert's shack in time to rescue Ruth from an attack by Clammert, but Rena is injured during the fight. John forgives Rena, and when she recovers she agrees to become Mrs. Stuart.

Cast

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Preservation

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With no prints of Flashing Spurs located in any film archives,[4] it is a lost film.

References

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  1. ^ Pitts p. 154
  2. ^ Progressive Silent Film List: Flashing Spurs at silentera.com
  3. ^ Sewell, Charles S. (January 24, 1925). "Flashing Spurs; Custer's Second for F.B.O. Is Conventional Type of Out-Door Melodrama with Plenty of Action". The Moving Picture World. 72 (4). New York City: Chalmers Publishing Co.: 367. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
  4. ^ Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Database: Flashing Spurs

Bibliography

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  • Langman, Larry. A Guide to Silent Westerns. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1992.
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