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A desert island love triangle where Clara Bow outshines the plot — shame we'll never see it.

Two Can Play (1926)

forgotten HollywoodJazz Age scandalpre-Code chaos

Overview

Drama

Dorothy Hammis (Bow), the daughter of wealthy financier John Hammis (Fawcett), has chosen as her fiance James Radley (Forrest), but her father disproves of him. He hires Robert McWorth (MacDonald), a former pilot, to discredit Radley by exposing indescretions in either his past or present contuct. McWorth leaves some valuable pearls for Radley to steal, but this plan fails, so he arranges for himself, Radley and Dorothy to become stranded on a desert island. Ultimately, Radley proves himself as the better man. After surviving both the elements and McWorth's scheming, he and Dorothy are married. This film is lost.

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Content warning
lost film

Standout Aspects

Acting

Clara Bow's IT-girl energy reportedly dominated every frame.

Production

Desert island sequences shot on location — rare for 1926.

Best for:Solo: Ponder what might've been while reading the synopsis twice.·Rewatch: Of other Clara Bow films — she's electric in what survives.
N

Director

Nat Ross

ReleasedFeb 21, 1926
Runtime1h 30m
StatusReleased

Vibe

Pacesteady
Intensitymedium
Tonemixed
Feelmedium
Encore Pictures

Top Cast

Clara Bow

Clara Bow

Dorothy Hammis

George Fawcett

George Fawcett

John Hammis

Allan Forrest

Allan Forrest

James Radney

Wallace MacDonald

Wallace MacDonald

Robert MacForth

Vola Vale

Vola Vale

Mimi Allen

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Deep Dive

Trivia, insights & behind the scenes

Trivia

This was one of Clara Bow's final silents before talkies; no known prints survive in any archive.

Cultural

The 'desert island test' trope peaked in 1920s cinema as a way to strip away social class — literally and figuratively.

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