The Leopard Woman


1920

Film Details

Release Date
Oct 1920
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
J. Parker Read, Jr., Productions
Distribution Company
Associated Producers, Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Leopard Woman by Stewart Edward White (New York, 1916).

Synopsis

After an unsuccessful attempt on his life, John Culbertson, a British secret agent, leads a safari from Bajuma, on the edge of the African desert, to the kingdom of M'tela. Also on route to that savage kingdom and bound by oath to prevent Culbertson from reaching it, is Madame, a secret agent of a rival government. Madame and her safari meet up with the Englishman's party in the desert where she is forced to accept his aid because her men are exhausted and dehydrated. Although she fulfills her promise to delay Culbertson by feigning illness, "the Leopard Woman," as she is called, unwittingly falls in love with him. After they make love, Culbertson scorns her and she orders Chaké, her servant, to kill him, but when the attempt fails, she is relieved. Culbertson's progress is delayed further when he loses his sight because of overexposure to the sun. Madame smashes his bottle of medicine in the hope of forcing his return to Bajuma, but determined to complete his mission, Culbertson forges ahead, blind, and with the help of a record player, forms an alliance between the primitive M'tela tribe and Britain. Finally choosing love over duty, Madame sends Chaké to find the British military surgeon, who restores Culbertson's vision. Thus foreign rivalry is swept aside for love.

Film Details

Release Date
Oct 1920
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
J. Parker Read, Jr., Productions
Distribution Company
Associated Producers, Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Leopard Woman by Stewart Edward White (New York, 1916).

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Scenes for this film were shot in the desert near Palm Springs, CA. According to news items, the cast included "several hundred Africans, Egyptians and others."