The Greyhound Limited
The Greyhound Limited
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The Greyhound Limited

The Greyhound Limited is a 1929 part-talkie crime drama and railroad theme film directed by Howard Bretherton and starring Monte Blue. In addition to sequences with audible dialogue or talking sequences, the film features a synchronized musical score and sound effects along with English intertitles. The soundtrack was recorded using the Vitaphone sound-on-disc system. The film was produced and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures. The film is a follow-up to the 1927 film The Black Diamond Express.

The film survives in the Library of Congress and Wisconsin Center For Film and Theatre Research, Madison Wisconsin. The full soundtrack survives on seven Vitaphone discs at UCLA.

Monte, a railroad engineer, lives at the home of Mrs. Williams and her son Bill, who is Monte's pal and the fireman on his engine. Bill is somewhat wild and girl-crazy, and Monte proves a great help to Mrs. Williams in keeping the boy straight and under control.

Bill, as usual, "falls in love" with Edna, a waitress at a railroad restaurant, and spends his whole month's pay in one night of revelry with her. Edna, who really likes Monte but has been ignored by him, goes out with Bill to pique Monte. She even agrees to attend the Engineers' Ball with Bill, but Monte, thinking to prevent Bill's plans to marry Edna, invites her himself. She accepts eagerly.

At the ball, Monte finds himself genuinely attracted to Edna. On the moonlit veranda, they share a moment just as Bill, having drowned his disappointment in liquor, arrives and sees them together. Misunderstanding Monte's motives, Bill angrily confronts him and severs their friendship. Monte tries to explain, but Bill refuses to listen.

Drinking heavily, Bill loses his job and leaves town with a group of derelicts. Weeks later, he returns, a wreck of his former self, and still refuses to speak to Monte. He joins the bums at a speakeasy, and during a dispute over payment, Limpy kills the proprietor by hitting him with a bottle. Bill, drunk and unresponsive, is framed for the crime when the others place the bottle in his hand and flee. Monte sees The Rat, one of the real culprits, leaving the scene, and shortly after, Bill is arrested.

Convicted of murder on circumstantial evidence, Bill is sent to the penitentiary to await execution. Later, while working his train, Monte sees two bums being ejected at a station and recognizes The Rat. Monte alerts a railroad detective, who arrests The Rat. Authorities decide to take him to jail in Banning, hoping to get a confession.

Monte and Edna, now close friends, are deeply distressed, knowing Bill's execution is scheduled for that evening. The Rat's companion escapes and telegrams Limpy, warning that The Rat may talk. Limpy and his gang rob the restaurant where Edna works, and she overhears their plan to derail the train to prevent The Rat from reaching Banning.

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