Mark Twain

Tag Area: Real-World Character
Feature Film

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court


We may never see this first movie adaptation of Twain’s story, since only three of the eight silent reels are known to still exist. The Yankee in this version is Martin Cavendish, who after reading Twain’s book, is knocked on the head by a burglar and slips into the time of Camelot. The result is high comedy coupled with a romantic interest and replete with motorcycles, explosions, Model T Fords, telephones, indoor plumbing, and lassos at a jousting tournament. As we did for Twain’s original, we classify the story as science fiction for the Yankee’s attempts at bringing modern technology to the distant past. And yes, the hero predicts a solar eclipse to save his life.

One review at Silent Hollywood indicates that the ending has Martin awakening from a dream and there is no explicit mention of actual time travel. With this in mind, we’re marking the time travel as debatable. Oh, and Mark Twain himself appears in the film, played by Karl Formes. —Michael Main
All this nobility stuff is bunk.
A portrait of Mark Twain surrounded by portraits of Harry Myers and five other
                actors from the 1921 movie.
  • Science Fiction
  • Romance
  • Comedy
  • Debatable Time Travel
Novel

Pastmaster 2

Twice Upon a Time


Custer lives! And so do Crazy Horse, Thomas Edison, and Mark Twain. History is never dead for Professor Alex Balfour, whose unusual destiny imposes on him the most extraordinary adventures of all time. —from publicity material
I can’t stop it, you know that. It’s part of me. My father could do it, hell, maybe his father could do it. It has to be genetic, as much a part of my DNA as the color of my hair. The point is not so much why or how it happens, but what the purpose of it is. What is it I’m supposed to do? And does anything I do make a difference?
A raft floats down a wide river underneath an airplane, General Custer, and
                Mark Twain.
  • Undetermined
  • Definite Time Travel