The Rocks of Valpre is a 1935 British crime film directed by Henry Edwards and starring John Garrick, Winifred Shotter and Leslie Perrins.[1] The film was made at Twickenham Studios.[2] It was based on the 1913 novel of the same name by Ethel M. Dell,[3] and was released in the U.S. as High Treason.[4] The film is set in the mid-nineteenth century with plot elements resembling the later Dreyfus Case.
The Rocks of Valpre | |
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![]() Original British trade ad | |
Directed by | Henry Edwards |
Written by | H. Fowler Mear |
Based on | the novel The Rocks of Valpré by Ethel M. Dell |
Produced by | Julius Hagen |
Starring | John Garrick Winifred Shotter Leslie Perrins |
Cinematography | Sydney Blythe |
Edited by | Michael C. Chorlton |
Music by | W.L. Trytel |
Production company | Real Art Productions |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures (UK) |
Release dates |
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Running time | 73 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
While staying in a small French coastal town, a young English woman falls in love with a French cavalry officer. Their romance is dramatically cut short when she is sent back to England to finish her education in a convent, while he is wrongly accused of being a spy by a rival officer and sentenced to imprisonment on Devil's Island. She settles down to a comfortable and respectable marriage with a wealthy Englishman. Ten years later, however, she is threatened with blackmail, and her former lover escapes from Devil's Island to come to her aid. Seriously ill from his time on the penal colony, he dies shortly afterwards.
TV Guide dismissed it as a "Sappy drama."[5]
Films directed by Henry Edwards | |
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