Category Archives: 1933

Torch Singer (1933)

Torch Singer
Directed by Alexander Hall and George Somnes
Written by Lenore J. Coffee and Lynn Starling from a story by Grace Perkins
1933/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

Michael Gardner: You’ve changed all right! You’re selfish, hard.
Mimi Benton: Sure I am, just like glass. So hard, nothing’ll cut it but diamonds. Come around some day with a fistful. Maybe we can get together.

Pre-Code “women’s picture” with plenty of tears.

As the movie begins, Sally Trenton (Claudette Colbert) takes a cab to a charity maternity hospital.  There she gives birth to a girl whom she names Sally.  She and one of the other unwed mothers set up housekeeping.  When her friend leaves to get married, Sally can no longer afford to keep the baby and gives it up for adoption.

She seeks employment as a chorus girl and climbs the ladder of show business until she is a famous, highly-paid torch singer.  One day, she fills in as “Aunt Jenny” on a children’s radio show.  Her stories and songs are a smash hit.  Sally hits on the idea of trying to locate her daughter through the show.  With Ricardo Cortez as Sally’s manager and David Manners as a father.

This is an OK watch, principally because of its cast.  A tad too much crying for my taste.

International House (1933)

International House
Directed by A. Edward Sutherland
Written by Francis Martin and Walter DeLeon
1933/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb Page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

[Peggy finds a litter of assorted kittens on her seat]
Peggy: I wonder what their parents were.
Professor Quail: Careless, my little dove cake, careless.

Another preposterous story allows Paramount to show off its stable of talent.

Professor Wong  is ready to show off and sell his new invention, “radioscope” – i.e., television.  People come from all over the world to the International House Hotel in Wu Hu (you can imagine the jokes), China to bid on the phenomenon.  The principal rivals are a Russian (Bela Lugosi) and young American Tommy Nash (Stuart Erwin).  Both of these have romantic troubles.  Professor Quail (W.C. Fields) drops in in his auto-gyro.  With Burns and Allen; Rudy Vallee; Sterling Holloway; Francis Pangborn; Cab Calloway; and Baby Rose Marie.

This is 68 minutes of fun.  But Cab Calloway’s “Reefer Man” number alone makes the film worth watching.  Baby Rose Marie belts out a perverse version of “My Bluebird’s Singing the Blues”.  I enjoyed myself.

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

This Day and Age (1933)

This Day and Age
Directed by Cecil B. deMille
Written by Bartlett Cormack
1933/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel

“And these children that you spit on
As they try to change their worlds
Are immune to your consultations.
They’re quite aware of what they’re going through. – “Changes” by David Bowie

Cecil  B. DeMille makes even a crime story into an epic.

A high school holds a “Boy’s Day” in which the senior boys shadow city officials such as a District Attorney, a Chief of Police, a Judge, etc.  Simultaneously, a Jewish tailor is slain by Louis Garrett (Charles Bickford), the boss of a protection racket.  The boys try to get justice for their friend from the officials they are shadowing.  They learn the justice system is entirely corrupt.  So they organize the boys from all the high schools to apprehend Garrett for some vigilante justice.  Part of their scheme involves Gay Merrick’s (Judith Allen) agreement with her boyfriend (Richard Cromwell) to detain an enforcer who “likes his olives green”.  With John Carradine under the name John Peter Richmond in a small part as an Assistant Principal.

This is a strange movie to say the least.  The story and dialogue are somewhat naive.   But deMille directs the cast of thousands to great effect.  The “trial” at the end reminded me of the trial by the criminals in Fritz Lang’s M (1931), without the pathos of Peter Lorre. Very pre-Code.

 

I’m No Angel (1933)

I’m No Angel
Directed by Wesley Ruggles
Written by Mae West
1933/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

Tira: Beulah, peel me a grape.

This has everything a Mae West movie should have, including a young Cary Grant.

Tira (West) is a sensation with her act in the sidehow of a circus.  She plays her many admirers like a fiddle.  Most of this involves the receipt of diamond bracelets and some sexual innuendos.  Finally, Tira is courted by Kirk Lawrence (Kent Taylor) and he asks her to marry him.  Problem is Kirk is already engaged.  Both the fiancee and friend Jack Clayton (Grant) try to persuade her to drop him.

Jack does succeed in breaking up the relationship but only because he falls in love with Tira himself.  When he hears damning information, he calls off their engagement.  This leads to a funny breach of promise trial.

The suggestive one-liners fly and West does some good musical numbers.  I’m especially fond of “They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk”.  I enjoyed this one a lot.

 

Design for Living (1933)

Design for Living
Directed by Ernst Lubitsch
Written by Ben Hecht from a play by Noel Coward
1933/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Criterion Channel

Gilda Farrell: We’re going to concentrate on work – your work. My work doesn’t count. I think you boys have a great deal of talent; but, too much ego. You spend one day working and a whole month bragging. Gentlemen, there are going to be few changes. I’m going to jump up and down on your ego. I’m going to criticize your work with a baseball bat. I’m going to tell you every day how bad your stuff is until you get something good and if it’s good I’m going to tell you it’s rotten till you get something better. I’m going to be a mother of the arts. – – No sex.
George Curtis, Tom Chambers: No.
Gilda Farrell: It’s a gentlemen’s agreement.

Fortunately Gilda is no gentleman and Ernst Lubitsch takes his celebrated touch just about as far as it can go in this delightful, sophisticated comedy.

The setting is Paris, France.  As the story starts, Gilda Farrell (Miriam Hopkins) is drawing a caricature of two young men who are sleeping in their train seats.  These are George Curtis (Gary Cooper), a painter, and Tom Chambers (Fredric March), a playwright.  Gilda is a commercial artist who works for strait-laced Max Plunkett (Edward Everett Horton).  Both men start flirting with Gilda in French.  But soon enough it comes out that they are all Americans.

The two men share a flat in Paris.  Both fall in love with Gilda and she with them, but Gilda can’t decide who she likes most.  Finally, she decides they should remain platonic friends. She will move in and act as taskmaster and muse for the artistic endeavors of the men.

Before you know it George has a gallery show and Tom’s play is produced in London. When Tom has to travel to participate in the production, George is left alone with Gilda. Thereafter, all bets are off.

Turn about is fair play and the year after making the two-women-love-one man triangle in Trouble in Paradise (1932), Lubitsch pulled off an even more audacious two-men-love-one-woman triangle in this film. And all the parties remain so civilized!  The Ben Hecht screenplay sparkles as bright as the acting and direction. Very, very Pre-Code and highly recommended.

Murders in the Zoo (1933)

Murders in the Zoo
Directed by A. Edward Sutherland
Written by Phillip Wylie and Seton I Miller
1933/US
Paramount Pictures
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel

Eric Gorman: [Said while sewing Taylor’s mouth shut] Mongolian Prince taught me this, Taylor. An ingenius device for the right occasion. You’ll never lie to a friend again, and you’ll never kiss another man’s wife.

If they had ditched the comic relief and the young lovers, this could have been an effective horror film.

Eric Gorman (Lionel Atwill) is a megalomaniac and is insanely jealous of his young wive Evelyn (Kathleen Burke “The Panther Woman”).  Worse he has a cruel, sadistic streak.  He and wife have just returned from a trip to the Orient where they collected animals for the zoo.  Despite Eric’s past horrific revenge on those who dare to come near her, Evelyn started a romance with Roger Hewitt (John Lodge) on the voyage home and has decided to leave Eric.  The body count mounts.

Simultaneously, we get the story of antivenin researcher Dr. Jack Woodward (Randolph Scott) and his fiance (Gail Patrick).  In addition, the zoo has hired Peter Yates (Charlie Ruggles) to publicize the new animals.  He attempts to do this despite the fact that he is plastered 100% of the time.

I don’t know why but Lionel Atwill always gives me the creeps.  He seems to relish performing these perverse characters just a little too much.  The horror parts are really solid.  The rest of the movie is the definition of mediocre.

Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933)

Gold Diggers of 1933
Directed by Mervyn LeRoy
Written by Erwin Gelsey, James Seymour et al from a play by Avery Hopwood
1933/US
Warner Bros.
IMDb link
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant

Trixie Lorraine: Isn’t there going to be any comedy in the show?

Barney Hopkins: Oh, plenty! The gay side, the hard-boiled side, the cynical and funny side of the depression! I’ll make ’em laugh at you starving to death, honey. It’ll be the funniest thing you ever did.

This movie captured my heart the first time I heard Ginger Rogers singing “We’re in the Money” in Pig Latin and I’m still loopy for it decades later. Memo to Hollywood: We need some feel-good escapist fare now as much as we did in the Great Depression. Pitch in!

When a Broadway show runs out of cash during the Great Depression, three chorus-girl roommates are left penniless.  Polly Parker (Ruby Keeler) has fallen in love with songwriter Brad Roberts (Dick Powell) who lives across the way.  Their luck turns when producer Barney Hopkins (Ned Sparks) comes to them with a show about the Depression. Unfortunately he does not have the funds to put it on.  But it turns out that Brad is the heir to a fortune and he becomes Barney’s “angel”, songwriter, and eventually leading man.

Brad’s brother J. Lawrence (Warren William) strongly objects to his involvement in show business and tries to prevent Brad’s marriage to Polly.  Friend Fanuel H. Peabody (Guy Kibbee) believes all show girls are parasites and gold diggers.  The other two roommates, Carol King (Joan Blondell) and Trixie Lorraine (Aline MacMahon), set about proving them wrong about Polly and snagging some wealthy men in the process.  Fay Fortune (Ginger Rogers) tries to attract the men as well.  With Billy Barty as a mischievous baby.

You don’t watch these things for the plot but for the extravagant Busby Berkley numbers and the snappy, naughty banter.  I find this movie to be pure pre-Code bliss.  This was my favorite film of 1933 back at the beginning of this blog.

Gold Diggers of 1933 was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Sound, Recording.

The Little Giant (1933)

The Little Giant
Directed by Roy Del Ruth
Written by Robert Lord and Wilson Mizner
1933/USA
First National Pictures (Warner Bros.)
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant

 

[box] James Francis ‘Bugs’: Greek philosphy! Pluto! Yeah, I bet you thought Pluto was a waiter. Ah, I’m just crawlin’ with education. I’ve been readin’ all them Greeks. They do plenty besides shinin’ shoes and runnin’ lunchrooms.[/box]

Edward G. Robinson could do it all – including comedy!

J. Francis Ahern (Edward G. Robinson) is better known as ‘Bugs’ in his native Chicago, where he is boss of the biggest beer mob.  With the election of Roosevelt and impending repeal of Prohibition, he realizes that his racket has just about run its course.  He quits, breaks up the gang, and moves with his millions to Santa Barbara where he intends to be a “gentleman”.  But he lacks all social graces and cuts a comic figure.  He soon falls hard for socialite Polly Cass (Helen Vinson), who makes fun of him behind his back.  But when his family finds out about the millions, wedding bells start ringing for her.

Bugs’s next step is to rent a swell house in keeping with his wealth.  He visits real estate broker Ruth (Mary Astor) and she shows him a magnificent one.  Secretly, Ruth is a member of the family who formerly owned the estate before it got taken by the Cass family in a crooked financial scheme.  Bugs hires Ruth to help him navagate the social scene. Can she save him from Polly’s clutches before he loses everything?

Robinson is superb at the physical and verbal comedy, which is especially rich when one knows how cultured he was in real life.  I love Mary Astor and found the film totally enjoyable.  Recommended.

Trailer

Hold Your Man (1933)

Hold Your Man
Directed by Sam Wood
Written by Anita Loos and Howard Emmett Rogers from a story by Loos
1933/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/FilmStruck

[box] Ruby: Wait a minute. I got two rules I always stick to when I’m out visitin’: keep away from couches – and – stay on your feet.[/box]

When Sassy Jean Harlow meets con artist Clark Gable the sparks fly.

Con artist Eddie Hall (Gable) flees into the unlocked apartment of Ruby Adams (Harlow) to avoid being nabbed by police.  This being 1933, she is taking a bubble bath at the time.  Ruby covers for Eddie when the police come knocking on her door.  The attraction between the two is unmistakable but Ruby is no pushover.

Eventually the two get together.  Ruby is uncomfortable with Eddie’s life style the whole time.  He spends time in jail and when he gets out she agrees to participate in a plan to blackmail a married admirer.  Things go terribly wrong, he takes off, and she ends up in a women’s reformatory.  Can love survive her incarceration?

This has premarital sex and illigetimacy to give it pre-Code credentials but the main draw is the exceptional chemistry of the stars and the non-stop wise cracks and double entendres.  Recommendecd.

 

Only Yesterday (1933)

Only Yesterday
Directed by John M. Stahl
Written by William Hurlburt, Arthur Richman and George O’Neill from a play by Frederick Lewis Allen
1933/USA
Universal Pictures
First viewing/YouTube

 

Perhaps I’ll get used to this bizarre place called Hollywood, but I doubt it. — Margaret Sullavan

This is an OK melodrama but more of interest as Margaret Sullavan’s screen debut.

Southern belle Mary Lane (Sullavan) has loved Jim Emerson (John Boles) from afar for years.  One fateful night he declares his love and they have what is to be a brief fling.  He is called up to service in WWI the next day.  She is left pregnant.  When he returns he does not even recognize her.  She decides to keep the child a secret.  He marries shortly thereafter.

Ten years later they meet again.  Jim, still oblivious, attempts another seduction …  With Bille Burke as Mary’s free-thinking aunt.

The plot has many similarities to Letter from an Unknown Woman (1948).  It is played for maximum pathos.  Sullavan started out strong and got even better when she had a chance to do comedy.

Montage of clips = beautifully done