Category Archives: 1929

Coquette (1929)

Coquette
Directed by Sam Taylor
Written by John Grey and Allen McNeil from a play by George Abbott and Ann Preston Bridgers
1929/US
Pickford Corporation
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

Norma Besant: I’ll tell you somethin’ I never told any other man, ever! Just the way you are, now, you’ll be the best lookin’ man there. Now, will you come?
Michael Jeffery: No.
Norma Besant: Well, you’re the first man I ever told that to the just didn’t naturally melt away.
Michael Jeffery: I reckon I’m different from the other men – you’ve never told that to.

I can’t believe Mary Pickford won an Oscar for overacting terribly in this romantic tragedy.

Norma Besant (Pickford) acts like a five-year-old around her beloved Daddy.  She is a consumate flirt who tries her craft on any man available including Daddy.  Daddy keeps an eagle eye on her.  She is being courted by Stanley, a man in her social circle, but has fallen in love with Michael Jeffrey (Johnnie Mack Brown).  Daddy doesn’t like Michael because he is not of their class and has a reputation as a shiftless hothead.  He orders Norma never to see him again.  The lovers agree to separate for six months so that Michael can get himself established in a good job.

Michael can’t stay away and returns 3 months later.  Norma doesn’t listen to Daddy and ends up sneaking out with Michael to his mother’s cabin and does not return until 4 a.m.  Daddy is outraged and shoots and kills Michael.  Daddy’s attorney urges Norma to tell several lies on the stand to protect Daddy from the death penalty.

I watched this for Mary Pickford and was disappointed.  I thought she went over the top both as the belle of the ball and as a tragic heroine.  She acts about 5-years-old in her scenes with Daddy.  Pickford produced the picture and possibly there was no one to restrain her.   Other than that, the production is quite adequate and watchable.

Mary Pickford won the Academy Award for Best Leading Actress.

Clip  – I thought the father looked so much like Anton Walbrook it was eerie

 

Desert Nights (1929)

Desert Nights
Directed by William Nigh
Written by John T. Neville et al
1929/US
Metro Goldwyn Mayer
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

Hugh Rand: [Overcome by Diana’s beauty] Three years away from the world – – a man almost forgets there are women like you…

Fun, short romance/adventure with John Gilbert and Mary Nolan.

Hugh Rand (Gilbert) is the manager of a diamond mine somewhern in southern Africa.  The mine is preparing for the arrival of Lord Stonehill (Ernest Torrence) and his daughter Lady Diana (Nolan).  They ask Rand to guide them on a lion hunt.  When he sees how beautiful the daughter is he agrees.  So begins a somewhat stormy romance.

Hugh offers to show Mary some rough diamonds and suddenly some thugs with guns arrive to assist Mary and her “father” (also known as Steve) in pocketing the entire tray worth millions of dollars. They then kidnap Hugh to force him to  guide them to safety on a trek through the Kalahari desert.  But water runs out.  Hugh is determined to recover the diamonds.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen Gilbert in anything but very serious roles.  Here he has a dashing cockiness reminiscent of Errol Flynn. Nolan is gorgeous and is very good as a sly conwoman and love interest.  Available free on YouTube.

John Gilbert tribute – what a gorgeous man!

The Letter (1929)

The Letter
Directed by Jean de Limur
Written by Monta Bell and Jean de Limur from a stage play by W. Somerset Maugham
1929/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

Howard Joyce: Damn clever, these Chinese.

The original adaptation of the Somerset Maugham story has many pleasures and makes an interesting contrast to the 1940 version with Bette Davis. Jeanne Eagels is a revelation.

If you have seen The Letter (1940), you already know the plot.  Leslie Crosbie (Eagels) is the wife of a rubber plantation manager (Reginald Owen) living in Malaysia.  She is bored with this existence.  She is also vain, selfish and vidictive.  She has been having a long term affair with Geoffrey Hammond (Herbert Marshall).   One night when her husband is out of town she writes a letter begging Geoffrey to come to her.  He is now living with a Chinese “half-caste” woman and wants to break it off with her.  So she shoots him.  This happens in maybe the first five minutes of the film.

Leslie is put on trial for her life.  She claims Geoffrey made advances on her and forced her to defend herself.  Things seem to be going in her favor.  Then the letter she wrote on the night of the murder surfaces, complicating Leslie’s life enormously.

Eagel’s take on her character is far less sympathetic than Davis’s.  Nevertheless, they are two great performances by accomplished actresses.  This movie is only 65 minutes long – it was lost for years – but manages to convey the whole story.  It leaves out a lot of the nuance contained in the later film.

Eagels, who had sad and eventful life, was nominated for the first posthumous Academy Award.  She died of a drug overdose shortly after the film was released.  The Letter was the American film debut of both Marshall and Owen.  Herbert Marshall, who plays the lover here, played the husband in the 1940 version.

Painted Faces (1929)

Painted Faces
Directed by Albert S. Rogell
Written by Fanny and Frederic Hatton; story by Frances Hyland
1929/US
Tiffany-Stahl Productions
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

Now there’s some sad things known to man
But ain’t too much sadder than
The tears of a clown
When there’s no one around – Hank Crosby, Smokey Robinson, and Stevie Wonder

Joe E. Brown gives a nuanced performance in this pre-Code courtroom drama.

Hermann (Brown) performs as the  clown Beppo in a vaudeville show.  One fateful night, a performer named Roderick arrives.  He has been making unwanted advances to a young fellow performer.  Her boyfriend is insanely jealous.  When Roderick is murdered, the young man is found with a gun in his hand.

Herrmann ends up on the jury for the young man’s trial on capital murder.  (We will overlook how improper this would be as he knew all the principals personally).  We move to the jury room where eleven members want to go home and will vote guilty on the first and all subsequent ballots.  Herrmann is the sole holdout.  He won’t explain himself but keeps repeating that the evidence is circumstantial and he just knows the boy did not do it.  Far be it from me to spoil a mystery.

I had never seen a picture with Joe E. Brown from back in his heyday and was curious so decided to try this out.  I was impressed.  Brown gives a nuanced performance in which he moves from pathos to comedy with ease. He even maintains a creditable (German?) accent throughout.   I enjoyed the film.

Smokey Robinson and the Miracles – 1970 performance

Two Shorts from 1929 – An Andalusian Dog and Big Business

An Andalusian Dog (Un chien andalou)
Directed by Luis Buñuel
Written by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí
1929/France
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/YouTube
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Di

I don’t do drugs. I am drugs. — Salvador Dali

The Master of Unfulfilled Desires got his start with this short film made in conjunction with Salvador Dali. There is no plot exactly, just a lot of surrealist imagery and some characteristic jabs at the Church and some erotic but unconsumated liaisons.  19 minutes.  It was interesting to circle back around after seeing most of Buñuel’s films in my journey through cinema history.

 

Big Business
Directed by J. Wesley Horne, Supervising Director Leo McCarey
Written by HM Walker
1929/US
Hal Roach Studios
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

[opening title board]
Narrator: The story of a man who turned the other cheek – and got punched in the nose.

Laurel and Hardy are door-to-door salesmen of Christmas trees in Los Angeles.  Their sales technique leaves a lot to be desired.  Their final customer says no rather violently and the boys respond tit for tat as their car and the customer’s house are completely destroyed.  16 minutes.  I enjoyed it.

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

See how much of 20’s Culver City and LA still survives

A Throw of Dice (1929)

A Throw of Dice (Prapancha Pash)
Directed by Franz Osten
Written by W.A. Burton and Max Jungk; story by Niranjan Pal
1929/India
British Instructional Films/Eye 4 Films/Himansu Rai Film/Universum Film
IMDb Page
First viewing/YouTube
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

“Mahabharata – whatever is not contained in this is not to be found anywhere”
― Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, The Complete Mahabharata, Volume 1 of 4, Books 1 to 3

I had zero expectations for this going in and came out of the experience delighted.

The film takes place in the India of the Mahabharata.  Adjoining kingdoms are ruled by cousins – King Ranjit and King Sohat.  The two spend much of their time gambling together.  Unbeknownst to King Ranjit, King Sohat is plotting to take his kingdom from him.  His first attempt is to send out his associate to kill his cousin with a bow and arrow while the two are tiger hunting.

King Ranjit is not killed but is nursed back to health by a recluse and his beautiful daughter Suneeta.  The two fall  in love and eventually elope back to Ranjit’s kingdom where elaborate wedding preparations commence.

Puckering up for the first kiss in Indian cinema history.

The unsuspecting Ranjit welcomes Sohat as an honored guest.  Violence having failed him, Sohat sets out to capture both Ranjit’s Kingdom and his bride in a game of chance,.

Every element of the simple story is beautifully presented and acted.  I especially enjoyed all the details of courtly life way back then and the wild animal footage.  A very pleasant surprise.  Recommended.

The Mysterious Island (1929)

The Mysterious Island
Directed by Lucien Hubbard
Written by Lucien Hubbard from the novel by Jules Verne
1929/US
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

Count Andre Dakkar: Who am I? I’m a scientist – who asks nothing, but to be left alone. Here on my island we don’t think of kings or rank or power. Here the humblest workman in my shops, the peasant who tills my field, is my equal. We work with but one end: to study, to learn, to be free! To seek happiness, each in his own way.

This early silent-talkie science fiction film suffers from many limitations but is a bit of fun nonetheless.

The setting is the mainland realm of Hetvia, ruled by the evil Baron Falon (Montagu Love), and the adjacent Mysterious Island which is benevolently governed by Count Dakkar (Lionel Barrymore). The people appear to be Eastern European or Russian. Dakkar is not only an egalitarian leader but a brilliant scientist who has invented a submarine that can explore the deepest depths of the sea. He has a theory that the place in occupied by a humanoid race that can breathe underwater.

Dakkar’s daughter Sonia is in love with his assistant Nikolai. Falon vehemently objects saying a Count’s daughter should not mix with a mere employee. Secretly, he covets Sonia for himself.

Nikolai volunteers to take the submarine on a test run. Later Dakkar joins them. With Dakkar gone Falon invades the island and kidnaps Sonia. He then takes a second sub down. The confrontation between the two rulers is interrupted with attacks by a crocodolian-like monster, a giant squid, and thousands of humanoids.

Despite the big budget and glamor studio backing, this is mighty similar to a good/bad 50’s B-film.  The miniature work is laughable as are the monsters and humanoids.  But it’s good fun for a lazy afternoon nonetheless.

 

Nothing But the Truth (1929)

Nothing But the Truth
Directed by Victor Schertzinger
Written by John McGowan from a play by James Montgomery and a novel by Frederic H. Isham
1929/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube

E.M. Burke: Oh, you’re a smart little fellow, aren’t you?
Robert Bennett: My mother thinks I am.
E.M. Burke: You wouldn’t want to buy any of this stock yourself, would you?
Robert Bennett: Oh, I… I don’t want to change my mother’s opinion.

I saw this two weeks ago and can remember nothing about it but the barest plot outline.  The definition of not essential.

Robert Bennett (Richard Dix) invests his fiancee’s money on a bet that he will not tell a lie for 24 hours.  His friends are eager betters on the other side.  Robert is not quite prepared for the spots his friends maneuver him into that require him to avoid the little white lies that polite society relies on.

Stills from this are few and far between. Here is Helen Kane (the voice of Betty Boop) performing.

I remember thinking this was OK but little else.  Richard Dix, who I absolutely hated in Cimarron (1931), is growing on me.  His “big” persona is perfect for this type of comedy.

Clip

The Great Gabbo (1929)

The Great Gabbo
Directed by James Cruze
Written by Hugh Herbert adapted from the story by Ben Hecht
1929/US
James Cruze Productions
IMDb Page
Repeat viewing/YouTube

Gabbo: [Otto won’t “shut up”] Otto, if you don’t keep quiet I’ll smash you! I’ll destroy so that you won’t make another sound! Do I want to listen to you? No!

Worth watching for Erich von Stroheim.  Not so much for the musical numbers.

The Great Gabbo (von Stroheim) is a cold, egotistical, but brilliant ventriloquist.  His dummy’s name is Otto.  Gabbo is in love with Mary (Betty Compson), a dancer in the vaudeville show he appears in.  Mary is interested in someone else.  But she gets along well with the kind and playful Otto.  Otto is ever ready with advice to the lovelorn in the frequent conversations he has with his master.

If they could have focused the movie on von Stroheim and the love triangle, this might have been a superior movie.  Unfortunately, it is marred by several musical numbers and homely chorus girls that seem to be a requirement to lure audiences in for early talkies. This film was on my 10 Favorites list for its year but will surely be knocked off the list on the next iteration, if there is one.

Glad to be back.

Street Angel (1928)

Street Angel
Directed by Frank Borzage
Philip Klein and Henry Robert Symonds from a play by Monkton Hoffe
1928/US
Fox Film Corporation
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube (free)

Title Card: Everywhere… in every town, in every street… we pass, unknowingly, human souls made great by love and adversity.

Another beautiful romance from Frank Borzage and company.

The story takes place in Naples, Italy. Angela (Janet Gaynor) has grown up tough on the streets but hides a beautiful soul within.  She desperately needs money to buy medicine for her dying mother.  Her only quick route to this is crime.  So she attempts to sell her body and when she is unsuccessful she turns to attempted theft.  She is apprehended and sentenced to a year in jail.  She escapes and is hidden by a traveling circus.

There she meets poverty-stricken painter Gino (Charles Farrell).  They start out as painter and model but soon are madly in love.  Gino needs to move to Naples to seek a better lot in life.  Angela accompanies him despite the danger she will be picked up by the police and the fact that Gino knows nothing of her past.

In Naples, things start looking up when Charles sells Angela’s portrait (looking like the Madonna) and receives a major commission to paint a mural.  Can their love survive Angela’s rearrest?

This one didn’t make me cry like Seventh Heaven but it is certainly worth watching even if only for the visuals.  The acting is great too and makes the story line go down quite easily.

Janet Gaynor won the first Best Actress Oscar for her performances in this, Seventh Heaven (1927) and Sunrise: A Story of Two Humans (1927).  The film was nominated in the categories of Best Cinematography and Best Art Direction.