Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920 film)

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a 1920 horror silent film about a doctor who releases the evil within himself with a serum.
 * Directed by John S. Robertson. Written by Clara Beranger and Thomas Russell Sullivan, based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson.

The world's greatest actor in a tremendous story of man at his best and worst! (taglines)

Sir George Carew

 * A man cannot destroy the savage in him by denying its impulses. They only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it.
 * My dear Lady Camden, a beautiful woman like you is Paradise for the eyes - - but Hell for the soul!

Dialogue

 * Sir George Carew: In devoting yourself to others, Jekyll, aren't you neglecting the development of your own life?
 * Dr. Henry Jekyll: Isn't it by serving others that one develops oneself, Sir George?
 * Sir George Carew: Which self? A man has two—as he has two hands. Because I use my right hand, should I never use my left? [Carew pointedly moves both hands independently, making his point known to the whole table] Your really strong man fears nothing. It is the weak one that is afraid of—experience.

Taglines

 * The world's greatest actor in a tremendous story of man at his best and worst!

Cast

 * John Barrymore — Dr. Henry Jekyll / Mr. Edward Hyde
 * Brandon Hurst — Sir George Carew
 * Martha Mansfield — Millicent Carew
 * Charles Willis Lane — Dr. Richard Lanyon
 * George Stevens — Poole, Jekyll's butler
 * Nita Naldi — Miss Gina, Italian artist
 * Cecil Clovelly — Edward Enfield
 * J. Malcolm Dunn — John Utterson