The Little French Girl

The Little French Girl is a 1925 American silent drama film directed by Herbert Brenon and written by John Russell and Anne Douglas Sedgwick from a 1924 novel by Sedgwick, and filmed in the British Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda, 640 miles off North Carolina, where some scenes were filmed at Government House, the official residence of the Governor and military Commander-in-Chief of Bermuda General Sir Joseph John Asser.

[1] The film stars Mary Brian, Maurice de Canonge, Paul Doucet, Maude Turner Gordon, Neil Hamilton, Julia Hurley, and Jane Jennings.

[2][3] As described in a film magazine review,[4] Madame Vervier, a sophisticated woman, sends her daughter Alix to live with Owen Bradley's parents in London.

Owen is in the midst of a flirtation with her despite his family's feelings and his having a fiancée.

Giles, a friend of Toppie, goes from London to Paris seeking Alix, the "little French girl."