The film is significant because it was Cecil B. DeMille's first release from his new production company, DeMille Pictures Corporation. It was also upcoming actor William Boyd's first starring role. In DeMille's next picture, The Volga Boatman, which was a tremendous success, he cast Boyd as the solo leading man.
Plot
As described in a film magazine review,[3] Malena, a young bride, has a fear of her husband Kenneth which she cannot understand but which he attributes to his unprepossessing physical appearance. Finally, angered, the young husband leaves his wife to go to Chicago and have a physical defect overcome, if this be possible. His wife leaves on the same train. The train is wrecked and the young man rescues his wife from death. Thereafter they understand each other.
^"New Pictures: The Road to Yesterday", Exhibitors Herald, 23 (5), Chicago, Illinois: Exhibitors Herald Company: 53–54, October 24, 1925, retrieved October 23, 2022 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.