| Shootin' for Love | |
|---|---|
![]() Advertisement with the title as Shooting for Love  | |
| Directed by | Edward Sedgwick | 
| Written by | Albert Kenyon Raymond L. Schrock Edward Sedgwick  | 
| Starring | Hoot Gibson | 
| Cinematography | Virgil Miller | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 50 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Languages | Silent English intertitles  | 
Shootin' for Love is a 1923 American silent Western film directed by Edward Sedgwick and featuring Hoot Gibson.[1] Gibson plays a World War I veteran suffering from shell shock who at his father's ranch becomes involved in a dispute over water rights that leads to gunfire.[2][3] The British Board of Film Censors, under its then-current guidelines, banned the film in 1923.[1][4]
Cast
- Hoot Gibson as Duke Travis
 - Laura La Plante as Mary Randolph
 - Alfred Allen as Jim Travis
 - William Welsh as Bill Randolph
 - William Steele as Dan Hobson
 - Arthur Mackley as Sheriff Bludsoe
 - W.T. McCulley as Sandy
 - Kansas Moehring as Tex Carson
 
See also
References
- 1 2 Progressive Silent Film List: Shootin' for Love at silentera.com
 - ↑ Langman, Larry (1992). A Guide to Silent Westerns. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 406. ISBN 0-313-27858-X.
 - ↑ Cox, Caroline (2001). "Invisible Wounds". In Micale, Mark S.; Lerner, Paul; Rosenberg, Charles (eds.). Traumatic Pasts: History, Psychiatry, and Trauma in the Modern Age, 1870-1930. Cambridge University Press. p. 295. ISBN 0-521-58365-9.
 - ↑ British Board of Film Classification record for Shootin' for Love
 
External links
- Shootin' for Love at IMDb
 - Shootin' for Love at AllMovie
 - Lobby card at gettyimages.com
 
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