Daily Archives: December 9, 2013

The Citadel

The Citadel
Directed by King Vidor
Written by Ian Dalrymple et al based on the novel by A.J. Cronin
1938/UK
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios

First viewing; Warner Archives DVD

[box] Tagline: Secrets of a doctor as told by a doctor![/box]

Robert Donat is wonderful in this medical melodrama.

Idealistic doctor Andrew Manson (Donat) gets his first post-graduate job as the assistant to a doctor in a Welsh mining village.  There he runs into his first hurdle when he refuses to re-certify some of the union leaders as unfit to work or to give miners who need the work “pink medicine” for their persistent coughs.  He is told to go with the flow or else so quits and applies for a position in a larger mining town.  He can’t get this without being married so proposes to schoolteacher Christine (Rosalind Russell)  without preliminaries.

In the town, Manson is increasingly suspicious that the miner’s coughs are caused by anthracite dust.  He wants to study the disease by hospitalizing the men.  This is summarily rejected so he and Christine set up a laboratory to do their own research. Eventually, the lab is smashed to bits by angry, suspicious miners and the couple set out for London.

After a year of struggling, Manson finally stumbles upon a wealthy hysterical patient and is adopted by other high-society doctors.  He becomes a Harley Street physician more interested in new cars than patients.  A tragic accident causes him to reevaluate his priorities.  With Ralph Richardson as a fellow idealist and Rex Harrison as one of the London doctors.

While this is not the most dynamic story ever made, I enjoyed it for its acting.  Donat rises high above his material.  This is also the earliest film I could truly get behind Rosalind Russell in, though she didn’t hit her stride until she started doing comedy.  King Vidor keeps the story moving.

Robert Donat received his first Academy Award nomination for his work on The Citadel. The film was also nominated in the categories of Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Writing (Screenplay).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hn_BpBe8-XE

Trailer

 

Prison Break (1938)

Prison Break
Directed by Arthur Lubin
Written by Dorothy Davenport; story by Norman S. Parker
1938/USA
Universal Pictures

First viewing; Netflix rental

Despite the usually reliable leads, I thought this was a bit of a stinker.

Good-guy Joaquin Shannon (Barton MacLane) is a tuna fisherman and pillar of the community.  For some unexplained reason, the father and brother of his sweetie Jean (Glenda Farrell) will do anything to prevent their relationship.  One night, Jean’s brother goes to a bar where Joaquin is hosting a bachelor party for Joaquin’s brother Chris.  Chris gets very drunk at the party.  In the meantime, shady character Big Red Kincaid (Ward Bond) spots Jean’s brother’s bankroll at the bar and kills him in the street.  When Chris walks up the stranger clobbers Chris and flees.  Joaquin comes upon this scene and assumes Chris killed the brother.  He takes the rap for manslaughter and goes to prison for 1 – 10 years.  His plan is to be on good behavior for a year and earn parole. But naturally Big Red turns up and Joaquin’s life both inside and, eventually outside, the prison is one fight after another, through no fault of Joaquin.  There is no on-screen prison break.

Believe it or not, my plot summary takes up well less than half of this 72 minute movie and I left out the extensive fishing scenes at the beginning.  I also left out the many ridiculous deus ex machinas included in the second half.   Despite the crowded story, I thought the movie dragged terribly.  The director is better known for the series of Abbott and Costello movies.  His forte is clearly not drama.