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Cast

Paul Muni
James Dyke

Marguerite Churchill
Mary Douglas

Johnny Mack Brown
Robert Ward

DeWitt Jennings
Warden Holt

Edith Yorke
Mrs. Douglas

Clifford Dempsey
Police Lieutenant

Henry Kolker
Judge

Sherwood Bailey
Little Boy (uncredited)

George Chesebro
Liberty Bondsman (uncredited)

Sidney D'Albrook
Prison Guard (uncredited)

Dannie Mac Grant
Little Boy (uncredited)

Henry Hall
Harold Everett Porter (uncredited)

Robert Homans
Newspaper Printer (uncredited)

Billy O'Brien
Boy (uncredited)

Helen Parrish
Little Child on Train (uncredited)

George C. Pearce
Dr. Edmondson (uncredited)

Buster Slaven
Little Boy (uncredited)

Don Terry
Policeman (uncredited)

Delmar Watson
Little Boy Who Falls Down (uncredited)

Tom Wilson
Tom the Printer (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Paul Muni stands out here as the anonymous young man who walks into a police station and confess to a murder. Adopting a name ("Dyke") from a calendar hung on the wall, he is tried, convicted and sentenced to death. When his fate is published, as well as his photo, in the press a young girl and her mother wonder that he might be their long lost brother/son and set out to try establish the truth. The story is curious - it gives us surprisingly little to go on until the last fifteen minutes when we are treated to a wonderfully poignant denouement with the Oscar nominated Muni and "Mary" (Marguerite Churchill). It's more a film to appreciate because of it's cinematic significance - a very early and well made - if simple - talkie, but as a story it is really rather under-cooked for the most part and the supporting efforts add little to the intrigue.
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