Conceit is a 1921 American silent drama film produced and released by Selznick Pictures Corporation. The film stars William B. Davidson and Mrs. De Wolf Hopper, who later became a gossip columnist using the name "Hedda Hopper".
This is a film preserved at the UCLA Film & Tv Archives.
^ White Munden, Kenneth, ed. (1997). The American Film Institute Catalog Of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films, 1921-1930, Part 1. University of California Press. p. 142. ISBN 0-520-20969-9.
Based upon a short review in a film magazine, a young woman (Talmadge) marries a wealthy scoundrel so that her mother can live in luxury. While vacationing on his yacht, she becomes shipwrecked and is cast on a desert island with a stoker (Standing) for her companion. They eventually fall in love, but are rescued just before celebrating their wilderness-witnessed nuptials. Her husband later dies, so the lovers are then able to marry.
Fleurette et la Belle Russe, sœurs jumelles, sont des danseuses parisiennes. La première épouse Phillip Sackton, un membre de l'aristocratie traditionnelle Anglaise. Ses parents déshéritent ce dernier, et pour subvenir à ses besoins il se met à peindre pendant que sa femme donne des cours de danse à des enfants.