Iron Master


1h 4m 1932

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Release Date
Nov 1, 1932
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Allied Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Allied Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Le Maitre des forges by Georges Ohnet (Paris, 1882) and his play of the same name (Paris, 15 Dec 1883).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 4m
Film Length
6,221ft (7 reels)

Synopsis

Steve Mason, taking his noon break at the Stillman Iron Works where he is employed, collides with a speeding car driven by Janet Stillman, the daughter of the foundry's owner, John. Steve scolds her for her reckless driving, and she responds by asking her father to fire him. Steve is collecting his final paycheck when he is stopped by Stillman. Pleased that someone stood up to his daughter, Stillman offers Steve a better job at the foundry. During the next five years, Steve rises through the ranks, winning Stillman's esteem and the affection of the men in the plant. Stillman is fighting off a takeover by Paul Rankin, who has joined with Stillman's foreman, Turner, to instigate a strike. Steve intervenes and convinces the men to return to work. A bit later, Stillman dies, leaving Steve in complete charge of his business and family affairs. With the exception of young Billy, Stillman's grandson, the family, social climbing Mrs. Stillman, Janet, snobby son David and another daughter Diana, who is married to a British peer, are outraged by the news. They try to break the will and, when they cannot, decide to work against him. Rankin convinces the family that Steve will ruin the business and urges them to pretend to go along with Steve, while behind his back, they plot to destroy him. Steve refuses to give David the money to marry his showgirl fiancée, Flo Lancert, unless he shows himself capable of handling the responsibilities of marriage by getting a job. When both Flo and David refuse to consider this, Steve tells David that Flo had been in prison and has a child by another man. Determined to get his revenge, David takes a laborer's job in the plant, and Janet becomes an assistant to Miss Smith, Steve's secretary. They conspire together to deliver confidential bids to Rankin. When Rankin underbids Steve on two contracts, he suspects that there is leak in the office and requests upmost secrecy on the figures for the Hoover Dam bid. He then puts his own money into the plant to keep it in business. Janet, who has fallen in love with Steve, refuses to give the figures to David and they quarrel. After a struggle, David grabs what he thinks are the figures and rushes them to Rankin. Billy, however, has taken the papers from the office. He innocently tells Smith what happened, and she follows David to Rankin's office. Janet, meanwhile, has confessed everything to Steve. He explains how Rankin planned to cheat them out of the plant, and now that everything is cleared up, Janet promises to marry him.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Release Date
Nov 1, 1932
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Allied Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Allied Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Le Maitre des forges by Georges Ohnet (Paris, 1882) and his play of the same name (Paris, 15 Dec 1883).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 4m
Film Length
6,221ft (7 reels)

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Reviews credit both Freddie Frederick and Ronnie Cosby with the role of "Little Billy Stillman." It is presumed that they played the child at different ages. Georges Ohnet's novel was the basis for the 1917 Fox film American Methods, directed by Frank Lloyd and starring William Farnum and Jewel Carmen (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1911-20; F1.0102). The Biograph Co. filmed a two-reel version of the novel in 1914 entitled The Iron Master.