Daily Archives: March 1, 2022

Our Modern Maidens (1929)

Our Modern Maidens
Directed by Jack Conway
Written by Josephine Lovett, Marian Ainslee, and Ruth Cummings
1929/US
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

Billie Brown: All together, children… what are *our* thoughts on leaving school?
The Girls: Men! Men! Men! Men! MEN!

Jazz age love quadrangle could have been better if someone had asked Joan Crawford to rein her performance in a little.

Billie Brown (Crawford) is the daughter of an immensely wealthy man.  As the film begins, she becomes engaged to Gil Jordan (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.)., an ambitious diplomat.  They decide to keep the engagement secret.

Billie runs into hunky tycoon Glenn Abbott (Rod La Roque) on a train and decides to invite him to a huge house party she is hosting.  She wants to use her feminine wiles to get Glenn to use his influence to get Gil an assignment in Paris.  The party is wild, to say the least, complete with entertainment including imitations of famous actors by Gil and a bizarre interpretive dance by Billie.

Billie has invited her beautiful romance-novel-reading friend Kentucky (Anita Page) to live with her for the summer.  Kentucky falls madly in love with Gil and he doesn’t exactly object to her attentions.  In the meantime, Billie is going out with Glenn and he falls in love with her.  When her engagement to Gil is revealed, he is furious.  The bride, the groom, and the best friend are all miserable on the wedding day.

Joan Crawford is not a great favorite of mine and she was much too much in this movie.  She prances around like a flirtatious and precocious child.  Her dance solo must be seen to be believed.  Everybody else was good and the film has MGM glamor written all over it.

This was Crawford’s last silent movie.  She met Douglas Fairbanks Jr making this film and their real life wedding was highly publicized to promote the picture.

Walk Cheerfully (1930)

Walk Cheerfully
Directed by Yasujiro Ozu
Written by Tadao Ikeda and Hiroshi Shimizu
1930/Japan
Shochiku Kinema (Kamata)
IMDb link
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

Yasue Sugimoto: You don’t even love yourself. How could you ever love someone else?

Even in this early silent picture, you can glimpse some of the genius that was Yasujiro Ozu.

Ken(ji)-the-Knife is the leader of a gang of pickpockets.  He doesn’t give his moll the attention she thinks he deserves.  One day, Kenji glimpses the dainty feet of Chieko peeking out from under her kimono.  He thinks she must be wealthy but really she has arrived in her boss’s car to pick-up jewelry he ordered.  The boss seeks to use the jewelry to win Chieko’s favors but she is not that kind of girl so she quits.

At any rate, Kenji begins courting Chieko.  When she learns he is a criminal, she tells him she doesn’t want to see him again until he has changed his evil ways and obtained legitimate employment.  This isn’t as easy as one might expect.

The plot is less interesting than the glimpse into 1930 Japanese urban life. The gang members are all very Westernized but in an oddly comic way. They do kind of a little dance, instead of bowing, when they greet each other. The walls of the gang headquarters are filled with Western boxing posters and English lyrics from popular songs as well as a poster from “Our Modern Maidens”. The office where the heroine works has a movie poster of Joan Crawford in “Our Dancing Daughters”. Only the heroine and her family wear kimonos.

This is an early silent film by one of my very favorite directors, Yasujiro Ozu. The subject matter is highly uncharacteristic of him. You can see early evidence of the development of his stylistic flair.   At the same time, it is full of the gentle comedy and humanity I love so much.  It was in my Top Ten Favorites for its year and I think I liked it even better the second time.

Shadow of the Law (1930)

Shadow of the Law (AKA The Quarry)
Directed by Louis J. Gasnier
Written by John Farrow from a play by Max Martin and Jack A. Moroso
1930/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

Detective Lt. Mike Kearney: Next time you want to get the truth from a woman, don’t send money – send a cop.

The always debonaire William Powell is the best thing about this creaky wrong man mystery. Pity he didn’t have better material.

John Nelson (Powell) is a wealthy man-about-town. He escorts a neighbor, Ethel Barry (Natalie Moorhead) to her apartment after a night out. When the two get there, an angry man is waiting.  Nelson intervenes to defend Ethel and in the scuffle the man is knocked out of the window.  Ethel disappears, taking Nelson’s self defense claim with her, and he is tried, convicted and sentenced to jail.  Nelson spends the rest of the movie trying to clear his name.

Well. this one was a dud.  I’ll always take a chance on William Powell, however.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJ1SdfCxh3k