Lady Killer Directed by Roy Del Ruth Written by Ben Markson and Lillie Hayward from a story by Rosalind Keating Shaffer 1933/US Warner Bros. IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
Movie Patron: [Looking at a Movie Poster] Tommy, Edward G. Robinson in a Dark Ha-zard.
Slug – Movie Patron: Well, you gotta get a load of that guy!
Movie Patron: Yeah, he’s not bad.
Cagney gives his all to this entertaining movie.
Jimmy Cagney plays tough guy Dan Quigley who gets involved with some con artists courtesy of tempting moll Myra Gale (Mae Clarke). Dan is so adept at criminal activities that eventually the gang owns a nightclub. Things get too hot to handle when the gang moves on to jewel heists that lead to murder. Myra flees to Mexico with the gang rather than bailing Dan out.After some hard times, Dan makes a name for himself in movies. He meets and falls in love with leading lady Lois Underwood (Margaret Lindsay). But the gang returns like bad pennies and attempt to blackmail our hero.
A rare mustachioed role for James Cagne
Cagney displays his usual energy and charm and this is an entertaining picture. It is kind of puzzling in tone. The dialogue is light and snappy and yet there is some serious violence toward the end.
Queen Christina Directed by Rouben Mamoulian Written by H. M. Harwood and Salka Viertel from an original story by Viertel and Margaret P. Levino 1933/US Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Antonio: There’s a mystery in you.
Christina: Is there not in every human being?
Director Mamoulian and MGM provide beautiful staging, lighting, camerawork, costumes, and art direction to this biopic/costume drama. Some of the acting not so much.
After her father was killed in battle, Christina assumed the Swedish throne as a child. She had been raised as a boy, leaving her decisive, independent, and fearless. She grows up to be Greta Garbo. The throne weighs heavy on Christina’s head. All her courtiers are urging her to marry her cousin, a military hero. They are also in favor of continuing to fight after a major victory in the 30 Years War. Christina refuses to grant either wish.
One fine day she goes off riding through the snow disguised as a young man with her faithful servant Aage (C. Aubrey Smith). She meets a group of Spaniards who are stuck in the snow and helps them with their carriage. Later they meet at an inn. Christina has booked the best room in the packed inn. When the Spaniards arrive they try to outbid Christina for the room. But the Spanish envoy Antonio (John Gilbert) finds the “young man” fascinating and the two agree to share the room. Nature takes its course and the lovers spend a blissful three days together.
Antonio had been coming to deliver King Philip of Spain’s marriage proposal and is not amused to find Christina is actually the Queen. They make up though. Now Christina must choose between duty and freedom. With Lewis Stone as a pompous courtier and Ian Keith as a jilted suitor.
My opinion of this has changed with each viewing. There is no denying that the staging, lighting, art direction and costumes are stunning. The problem is I am hit or miss with Garbo. This is a miss in my book. She is unnaturally dramatic which may have worked well in her silent films but is not so effective when she has to deliver dialogue. She does look absolutely gorgeous, however.
The Private Life of Henry VIII
Directed by Alexander Korda
Written by Lajos Biro and Arthur Wimperis
1933/UK
London Films Production IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
Palace servant: Anne Boleyn dies this morning; Jane Seymour takes her place tonight. What luck!
Another servant: For which of them, I wonder?
Charles Laughton gives a bravura performance that spans decades in this biopic that focuses on Henry VIII’s last five wives.
The story begins on the execution day of Anne Boleyn (Merle Oberon). We never really get to know Jane Seymour (Wendy Barrie) before she dies in childbirth, giving the King his only son. Courtiers convince Henry to marry Anne of Cleves (Elsa Lanchester) for political reasons. Clever Anne does not want the marriage as she has another lover and manages to escape by winning at cards.
The main wife focused on is Katherine Howard (Binnie Barnes). She has been dreaming of a royal alliance since the death of Anne Boleyn despite her affair with Thomas Culpeper (Robert Donat). She gets her chance with the exit of Anne. She seems to be the one true love of Henry but is caught cheating and makes wife number two to be beheaded. Finally, Anne of Cleves tells Henry, who is now an old man, that he needs a real wife. She points out Katherine Parr (Everely Gregg) who is acting as governess to the King’s children. He takes the advice and she gently nags and takes care of him until his death.
The first time I saw this movie was in drama class many moons ago when I was in high school. I can still vividly recall the scene when Charles Laughton’s Henry plays cards with Elsa Lanchester’s Anne of Cleves. I enjoyed that just as much this time, possibly more. Merle Oberon makes quite an impact in very little screen time. This is a very fun movie and a performance that shows off Laughton’s range from comedy to pathos. Recommended.
Charles Laughton won a Best Actor Oscar, the first awarded to a foreigner, for his performance in this film. This was also the first foreign film to be nominated for Best Picture.
King Kong Directed by Merion C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack Written by James Ashmore Creelman and Ruth Rose from an idea conceived by Edgar Wallace and Merion C. Cooper 1933/US RKO Radio Pictures IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Carl Denham: We’ll give him more than chains. He’s always been king of his world, but we’ll teach him fear. We’re millionaires, boys. I’ll share it with all of you. Why, in a few months, it’ll be up in lights on Broadway: Kong, the Eighth Wonder of the World.
The granddaddy of all special effects movies withstands the test of time beautifully.
Adventurer/impresario Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) has convinced a skipper and crew to take him to an unknown location where he intends to make an unknown movie. He needs a female lead. Desperate, he picks up starving Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) in the city and it is off to the races. First mate Jack Driscoll (Bruce Cabot) does not like the idea of having a woman on board. He gets over this quickly and Ann and Jack are in love before too long. Denham coaches Ann on her screaming technique.
As the ship nears its intended destination, Denham explains that they are going to an uncharted island to make their picture. When they get there they find that villagers are engaging in a ritual. They prepare a young woman to be sacrificed as the bride of Kong to placate the giant ape. When they see the lovely Ann, they decide that she will make a better bride than one of their relatives. They tie her to some posts and she screams her lungs out as the Kong plucks her off her platform.
There follows a pursuit which kills most of the crew of the ship. Kong takes Ann through a jungle populated by dinosaurs, stopping to defeat them one by one. He seems to be protective of Ann during these encounters. During one such battle she manages to slip away so she can be rescued by Jack.
Denham is not deterred from his project. He sedates King Kong with gas bombs and brings his captive to New York City where he plans to put him on exhibition. Then all hell breaks loose.
This is still amazing for its time. It is hard to imagine how much work must have gone into the elaborate stop-motion animation, matte paintings, and projections needed to make this work. It is impressive that we end up being scared by and feeling pity for what is, after all, a rubber puppet covered with rabbit fur. The Max Steiner music, one of Hollywood’s first purpose-written full-length film scores, adds to the suspense. Even after several viewings, I found myself in suspense during the scary moments. Essential.
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I also watched Lowell Sherman’s “The Greeks Had a Name for Them”/AKA “Three Broadway Girls” (1932). Three women are the best of friends. Except when it comes to stealing wealthy men from each other. Ina Claire will resort to the lowest of tricks to do this. Joan Blondell is more sensible. Madge Evans has a very wealthy boyfriend David Manners whom she loves for himself. But Ina is not about to leave him alone. She also steals pianist Lowell Sherman who had offered to finance Madge’s piano lessons and be her sugar daddy. It’s a very pre-Code movie but nothing to write home about in my opinion.
She Done Him Wrong Directed by Lowell Sherman Written by Mae West, Harvey F. Thew and John Bright 1932/US Paramount Pictures IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Lady Lou: I always did like a man in a uniform. That one fits you grand. Why don’t you come up some time and see me?
Fun, fun comedy based on Mae West’s Broadway hit “Diamond Lil” and an early role for Cary Grant as one of her many admirers.
It is the Gay Nineties. Lady Lou (West) is the headline singer in a San Francisco saloon. But her main business is collecting diamonds provided by her many, many admirers. Next door to the saloon is a religious mission, Captain Cummings (Cary Grant) is newly arrived to run the mission. Lou takes one look at the Captain and makes it clear she wants to know him much better, diamonds or no diamonds.
There is a plot involving a young girl in trouble, a jealous ex-boyfriend who escapes from jail, some counterfeiters, a murder, etc., etc. The story is but an excuse for West to get off some naughty one liners and sing some of her signature songs. With Gilbert Roland as a Latin lover.
It’s hard to fathom why this was so shocking in its day. There are plenty of double entendres but it’s just bawdy good fun. This is the one where she asks Grant to “Come up sometime and see me.” Mae also sings “I Wonder Where My Easy Rider’s Gone”, “A Guy What Takes His Time” and “Frankie and Johnny”. I thought this was thoroughly entertaining.
I have to admire West. She was 40 when she made this film and her curves didn’t fit the figure popular at the time. Yet she really is sexy. And she is always in control.never cheap.
The Testament of Dr. Mabuse Directed by Fritz Lang Written by Fritz Lang, Norbert Jacques, and Thea von Harbou 1933/Germany Nero Film – AG IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel
Dr. Mabuse: The ultimate purpose of crime is to establish the endless empire of crime. A state of complete insecurity and anarchy, founded upon the tainted ideals of a world doomed to annihilation. When humanity, subjugated by the terror of crime, has been driven insane by fear and horror, and when chaos has become supreme law, then the time will have come for the empire of crime.
Hitler banned this for good reason. Regrettably, it has an effective and scary message for our own times.
The movie begins with a long, tense, dialogue-free sequence in which a spy is hiding in a back room of a printing plant. We hear the almost unbearable din of the machinery. The spy is detected. Criminals fail to kill him in an explosion.
Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler (1922) introduced the world to the titular criminal mastermind. He has been confined in an insane asylum for a decade and producing page upon page of writing. Otherwise he appears completely catatonic. The writings started out as nonsense but gradually they became detailed instructions for a variety of terroristic crimes.
The spy, a disgraced former member of the homicide squad, had been trying to redeem himself with Inspector Lohmann (Otto Wernicke) our old friend from M (1930). He reaches out to Lohmann on the phone but before he can reveal anything he is snatched from his room. He is later housed in the same asylum as Mabuse, completely insane. The only clue Lohmann has in some cryptic scratching on a window.
Dr. Mabuse has been running a vast criminal empire through hypnosis. His control survives his death. We follow Lohmann’s investigation and the efforts of one of Mabuse’s minions to get to the bottom of things in the name of love.
I love the atmosphere of dread Lang creates in this movie and the wonderful performance by Otto Wernicke as Lohmann. Hitler banned the film and you can certainly see why folks might see a similarily between Dr. Mabuse’s organization and his own. Lang departed for France shortly thereafter and from there to the United States where he had an illustrious second career. This was one of my favorites of its year and I don’t foresee it dropping from my new list. Highly recommended.
42nd Street Directed by Lloyd Bacon Written by Rian James and James Seymour from a novel by Bradford Ropes 1933/US Warner Bros. IMDb Page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
Dorothy Brock: Now go out there and be so swell that you’ll make me hate you!
The third of the 1933 Busby Berkeley musicals suffers a bit from a lack of Joan Blondell and a little too much story and too little spectacle. I love it all the same.
Julian Marsh (Warner Baxter) is a celebrated director of Broadway musicals. After barely recovering from a nervous breakdown (he seems headed for another one throughout), he agrees to direct a new musical that, if successful, will allow him to retire. The show is to star Dorothy Brock (Bebe Daniels). Would-be sugar daddy Abner Dillon (Guy Kibbe) has agreed to finance the show. Thus, Dorothy must keep her love affair with ex-vaudeville partner Pat Denning (George Brent) a secret.
Peggy Sawyer (Ruby Keeler) is the last girl to be picked for the chorus line. She meets cute with tenor Billy Lawler and he is sweet on her. But she is also platonically dating Pat. Finally, Dorothy can’t stand it and reveals their affair. That takes away the financing until gold-digging chorus girl Ann Lowell (Ginger Rogers) makes Abner putty in her hands. Then Dorothy breaks her ankle. With Una Merkel as a wise-cracking chorus girl and Ned Sparks as the dance director.
The part of this movie that always kills me is when Ginger Rogers tells Warner Baxter that she isn’t right to take over for the injured Bebe Daniels but that Ruby Keeler is because Ruby is such a great dancer! Such irony …
We come to these things for the comedy and musical numbers but here we get an honest-to-God dramatic plot. It does not improve the movie. The three numbers at the end are Busby Berkeley bliss but look slightly more like they could actually be staged in a theater than in the other films. These niggles matter not at all to me. I would watch this again anytime. Recommended.
42nd Street was Oscar-nominated for Best Picture and Best Sound, Recording.
Footlight Parade Directed by Lloyd Bacon; dance direction by Busby Berkeley Written by Manuel Seff and James Seymour 1933/US Warner Bros. IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
Nan Prescott: You scram, before I wrap a chair around your neck!
Vivian Rich: [Angrily] It’s three o’clock in the morning – where do you want me to go?
[Nan starts to speak, but Vivian immediately cuts her off]
Vivian Rich: You cheap stenographer…
Nan Prescott: Outside, countess. As long as they’ve got sidewalks YOU’VE got a job.
[Shoves her out, gives her a swift kick in the rump, and slams the door behind her]
James Cagney plays a Broadway musical director who finds he must bend to the times and produce musical prologues for talking pictures instead. Joan Blondell is his assistant and is secretly in love with him. Ruby Keeler is another secretary who dresses like a plain Jane but has unknown talents as singer and dancer. The show’s backers see that Dick Powell gets a job in the chorus but he rapidly moves to having a principal part paired with Ruby. With Guy Kibbe, Ruth Donnelly, Frank McHugh and Hugh Herbert.
Most of the musical numbers are at the end of the film. The comedy getting there is a lot of fun too. James Cagney shows off his dancing chops and boy does he have them. The Busby Berkley numbers must be seen to be believed. My husband actually gave this one a round of applause – a super rare reaction from him.
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I also watched Victor Fleming’s Red Dust (1932). All the enthusiasm I had in my 2018 review still applies. This contains probably my favorite performance by Jean Harlow.
The Invisible Man Directed by James Whale Written by R. C. Sherriff from the novel by H.G. Wells 1933/US Universal Pictures IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental
Farmer: Excuse me, sir. There’s breathing in my barn.
James Whale again shows his deft hand at mixing wit with violence and doing justice to both.
Jack Griffin (Claude Rains) works for Dr. Cranley (Henry Travers) in a research lab. He works in secret on something to do with food preservation advances. Actually, he is playing with fire by developing an invisibility drug. Unfortunately, he tests the drug out on himself without having discovered an antidote.
The invisible Griffin makes a run for a country pub where he hopes he can continue his work in private. But the landlady (Una O’Connor) walks in on him partically clad. Her screams continue for the remainder of the film. Something in his drug is making him both invisible and insane. He leaves the pub and has fun using his new found powers for evil.
Eventually, he decides he needs a visible assistant for his research and coerces his colleague and rival in love Dr. Arthur Kemp to fill that role. Griffin hates Kemp for his interest in Flora Cranley (Gloria Stuart). I’ll end here.
Claude Rains makes an unforgettable US film debut as the title character with his resonant voice. I could live without Una O’Connors hysterics but what would these movies be without them? Recommended.
Tugboat Annie Directed by Mervyn LeRoy Written by Zelda Sears and Eve Greene from stories by Norman Reiley Raine 1933/US Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental
Alexander ‘Alec’ Brennan: Mother! Are you all right? Did he strike you?
Annie Brennan: No! Your father has never struck me. Except in self-defense.
Marie Dressler shines as the titular tugboat captain and Wallace Beery adds to the fun as her ne’erd-do-well husband.
Annie Brennan (Dressler) struggles mightily to keep her tugboat business afloat. Her drunken husband Terry (Beery) keeps making mistakes that turn business away. They have a son Alec (Frankie Darro) who says he wants to drop out of school and work on the tug. Annie won’t have that. She has big plans for the boy.
Alec grows up to be Robert Young. He makes his mother proud when he becomes the youngest person to captain a luxury liner. Alec is engaged to Pat (Maureen O’Sullivan). He keeps urging his mother to dump his father but she refuses and the two become estranged. It will take a disaster to reunite them.
I like the stars and enjoyed the movie. Dressler has so much heart it’s hard not to fall in love with her.
I’ve been a classic movie fan for many years. My original mission was to see as many movies as I could get my hands on for every year from 1929 to 1970. I have completed that mission.
I then carried on with my chronological journey and and stopped midway through 1978. You can find my reviews of 1934-1978 films and “Top 10” lists for the 1929-1936 and 1944-77 films I saw here. For the past several months I have circled back to view the pre-Code films that were never reviewed here.
I’m a retired Foreign Service Officer living in Indio, California. When I’m not watching movies, I’m probably traveling, watching birds, knitting, or reading.
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