Daily Archives: January 7, 2022

Private Lives (1931)

Private Lives
Directed by Sidney Franklin
Written by Hans Kraly and Richard Schayer from a play by Noel Coward
1931/US
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

Amanda: I think very few people are completely normal really, deep down in their private lives. It all depends on a combination of circumstances. If all the various cosmic thingummys fuse at the same moment, and the right spark is struck, there’s no knowing what one mightn’t do. That was the trouble with Elyot and me, we were like two violent acids bubbling about in a nasty little matrimonial bottle.

MGM glamor meets Noel Coward in this solid early screwball comedy.

The setting is among the cosmopolitan young and wealthy.  Amanda Prynne (Norma Shearer) and Elyot Chase (Robert Montgomery) were formerly Mr. and Mrs. Chase.  They had a tumultuous passionate marriage that lasted three years. Constant bickering and even mutual combat did them in. Now they are divorced and have remarried. Amanda is with Victor Prynne (Reginald Denny) and Elyot is with Sybil (Una Merkel). Both new spouses constantly want to be reassured and are pretty boring.

As fate would have it, the two couples have booked romantic honeymoon suites next to each other on the French Riviera. It doesn’t take long before Elyot and Amanda hook up again and leave their new partners in the lurch. But can this new pairing overcome the differences that made them divorce in the first place?

This is a charmingly sophisticated movie with a preposterous plot. It’s a sort of proto-screwball comedy.  The dialogue and acting is spot on. Recommended.

 

The Public Enemy (1931)

The Public Enemy
Directed by William A. Wellman
Written by Kubec Glasmon, John Bright and Harvey Thew
1931/US
Warner Bros.
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime Rental

Tom Powers: I ain’t so tough.

This gangland classic introduced the world to the force of nature that was James Cagney.

Tom Powers (Cagney) and Matt Doyle (Edward Woods) are partners in crime, who got started with petty thefts while they were still kids. They participate in an unsuccessful bank robbery.  Their life of crime becomes really lucrative with the advent of Prohibition.  Tom’s brother and Matt’s sister strongly disapprove but neither of the boys care what they think.

Tom and Matt are more enforcers than crime lords but are making enough loot to attract women who are willing to play around.  Tom first lands Kitty (Mae Clarke) and they shack up together but he tires of her pretty fast.  Then he seduces the glamorous Gwen Allen (Jean Harlow).  But you know what they say about people who live by the sword …  Tom’s cockiness doesn’t help any.

This is an classic early gangster film with plenty of violence.  But it is Cagney that steals every scene he is in, which is most of them.  His energy and physicality were seldom equaled in movie history.  Iconic and recommended.

Louise Brooks turned down the role played by Jean Harlow, sealing her fate as Hollywood poison.

The Public Enemy was Oscar-nominated for Best Writing, Original Story.

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