King of the Pack

King of the Pack is a 1926 American silent adventure film directed by Frank Richardson and starring Charlotte Stevens, Robert Gordon, and Vera Lewis. Produced by the independent Gotham Pictures, it was designed as a vehicle for Peter the Great, one of several dog stars to appear in films during the 1920s.

Plot
As described in a film magazine review, young Selah Blair suffers at the hands of her brutal stepmother, the hardened mountain woman 'Widder' Gasper. With her companion dog King she saves a young woman, and the wealthy father rewards her with the gift of $1,000. Her stepmother plots to get rid of Selah so that she will get the money. With her henchman Chuck Purdy and her half-wit son Bud, she captures the runaway Selah and hold her captive in a cave. When Selah refuses to tell where she hid the money, the widow leaves Selah to die. However, her faithful dog King and her rural sweetheart Clint Sifton work together to rescue her and eventually the widow topples off a mountainside to her death.

Cast

 * Peter the Great as King, a Dog
 * Charlotte Stevens as Selah Blair
 * Robert Gordon as Clint Sifton
 * Vera Lewis as 'Widder' Gasper
 * Mary Cornwallis as Kitty Carlyle
 * Danny Hoy as Bud Gasper
 * Frank Brownlee as Chuck Purdy
 * W.H. Davis as Sam Blair
 * Frank Norcross as Dr. Joe Stoddard

Preservation
A print of King of the Pack is in the Archives Du Film Du CNC.