Tod Slaughter embarked on a theatrical career in 1905, swiftly establishing himself as the preeminent antagonist in a multitude of Victorian melodramas, which he brought to life on stages across England.
During the 1930s and 1940s, low-budget filmmaker George King, renowned for his quota-quickie productions, adapted many of these melodramas into films. Slaughter's over-the-top performances proved to be a perfect match for the material, and the most excellent of his cinematic endeavors convincingly evoke the notion that if Victorian-era filmmakers had the capability to produce feature-length films, they would likely have resembled these very productions.