The Pace That Kills (1928 Silent)
The Pace That Kills (1928 Silent)
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The Pace That Kills is the first feature film released by the notorious Willis Kent Productions. This low-budget studio specialized in "exploitation" pictures which only got past censors by emphasizing that they were cautionary tales meant to educate audiences about the dangers of "hard living" (i.e., sex and drugs). In reality, these sensationalistic movies had no other purpose than to fill up theatres. As an anti-drug film warning young people to stay away from "snow" (cocaine), "the needle" (heroin), and "the black smoke" (opium), The Pace That Kills is part of a long line of Hollywood cheapies that includes Reefer Madness (1936). Despite these humble origins, it is stylishly shot by Ernest Laszlo, later the Academy Award-winning cinematographer of Judgement at Nuremberg (1961), It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Ship of Fools (1965) and Logan's Run (1976). The Pace That Kills is his first credit in a career that spanned half a century. Willis Kent remade the film seven years later as a talkie, which was then retitled The Cocaine Fiends upon its re-release in 1937.
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