Monthly Archives: April 2022

Man Wanted (1932)

Man Wanted
Directed by William Dieterle
Written by Robert Lord and Charles Kenyon
1932/US
Warner Bros.
IMDb page
First viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 2

Lois Ames: You see, I’ve been having trouble with secretaries. The work is so uncertain. It needs a man. You understand that our relations will be purely of a business nature.
Thomas ‘Tom’: Of course, Mrs. Ames.

This pleasant. if slight, rom com benefits greatly from the performance of Kay Francis.

Lois Ames (Francis) inherited her father’s publishing business and relishes being in charge. She spends many late hours at work.  After her long suffering secretary refuses to work overtime she has an important vacancy to fill.

Tom Sherman (David Manners) works with his roommate Andy (Andy Devine) at a sporting equipment business.  He is assigned to sell a rowing machine to Lois.  He meets her late in the evening and it is obvious that there is a strong mutual attraction.  David volunteers to act as her secretary.  Time passes and eventually he is her right hand man.

This wouldn’t be a romantic comedy if there were not obstacles.  These come in the form of Tom’s awful fiancee Ruth (Una Merkel) and Lois’s playboy husband Freddie.  He is independently wealthy and plays polo along with partying constantly.  He is also having an affair with socialite Ann Le Maire (Claire Dodd), unbeknownst to Lois.  I’ll stop here.

This is an ok romantic comedy.  Francis is very good in it.  She had sly glances mastered at this point.  David Manners was his usual bland self.  Una Merkel’s role does not allow her to display her comic talents.  It’s missable but at only 62 minutes I enjoyed it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QSCI6g3MB1I

Lawyer Man (1932)

Lawyer Man
Directed by William Dieterle
Written by Rian James and James Seymour from a novel by Max Tell
1932/US
Warner Bros.
IMDb page
First viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 4

Olga Michaels: Remember, I told you it doesn’t pay to take cases against these big uptown lawyers. They got too much pull!
Anton (Tony) Adam: Yeah, well, I got a lotta push.

Joan Blondell and William Powell make a winning pair in their only film together.

The setting is early 20th Century in New York.  Crack defense attorney Tony Adam works the Lower East Side.  He relies on faithful secretary Olga Michaels (Blondell).  Her unrequited love for her boss is evident to everybody except him.  He’s quite a ladies man.

Tony wins a murder case against a high-class lawyer.  It is unexplained why this kind of a lawyer would be on the other side of a murder trial.  Any way, the attorney thinks Tony’s flair for jury trials would be a perfect match for his firm and Tony agrees to become his partner.  Olga moves with him but is forced to witness him take up with the boss’s sister Barbara (Helen Vinson).

Tony is soon courted by gang boss John Gilmurry but refuses to join his organization. Gilmurry tries to destroy him by introducting him to beautiful Virginia St. Johns (Claire Dodd).  Virginia has Tony eating out of her hand in short order and gets him to pursue a phony breach of promise case against an associate of Gilmurry.  This doesn’t go so well for him.  Later Gilmurry offers Tony a job as Assistant DA  to get him on his side and the tables turn.  With Roscoe Karns as a reporter and Sterling Holloway as Olga’s chum.

This movie’s plot is far too convoluted for the 68 minutes devoted to it.  But Powell and Blondell are in top form and their scenes together are all excellent.

Jewel Robbery (1932)

Jewel Robbery
Directed by William Dieterle
Written by Erwin Gelsey and Bertram Bloch from a story by Ladislas Fodor
1932/US
Warner Bros.
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 4

Robber: Come with me. I’ll drop you somewhere in the suburbs, untouched.
Baroness Teri von Horhenfels: Untouched? In the suburbs? Oh, no! No, that doesn’t intrigue me at all!

I rewatched this delightful farce without realizing I had already reviewed it here.  If possible, I enjoyed it even more the second time.  Powell’s pairing with Francis is second only to his screen “marriage” to Myrna Loy.  Kay is the more sly of the two. Highly recommended.

Clip

Wild Boys of the Road (1933)

Wild Boys of the Road
Directed by William A. Wellman
Written by Earl Baldwin from a story by Daniel Ahern
1933/US
Warner Bros.
Wild Boys of the Road
Repeat viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Collection Vol.

Edward ‘Eddie’ Smith: Go ahead! Put me in a cell. Lock me up! I’m sick of being hungry and cold. Sick of freight trains. Jail can’t be any worse than the street. So give it to me!

Hard-hitting Warner Brothers pre-Code exposé about kids who leave home to seek work when their parents lose their jobs.

The story starts in small town USA where high school sophomores Eddie Smith (Frankie Darrow) and Tommy Gordon (Edwin Phillips) are trying to get into their class dance.  Tickets cost 75 cents and they have only 75 cents between them.  Their disguise attempt fails and the boys and their dates drive off in Eddie’s beloved jalopy. The kids are typical goofy teenagers.

The next morning brings bad news.  Eddie’s father has been permanently laid off from his job.  Eddie eventually sells his car for scrap to help out.  Eddie’s father can’t find work and eventually his folks are threatened with eviction as their credit for groceries etc. is cut off.

Tommy’s mother has had very little work for months.  The two boys think the best thing is to move to a big city and try to find work there.  They plan to send money home to their parents.

So they start hopping trains.  The first fellow migrant they find is Sally (Dorothy Coonan) who is traveling disguised as a boy.  The three will stick together throughout the story.  The little band keeps growing as more and more youth travel the rails in search of work.  But there is no work and the railroad and police intercept any attempts to settle.  Finally,  the  kids fight back against the relentless pressure to move on.  With Sterling Holloway as one of the gang and Ward Bond as a predatory railroad guard.

This is powerful, terrific stuff up until the the abrupt and unearned ending. The lead, Frankie Darro, is splendid. He had the talent, energy and athleticism to be another Cagney but was hampered by his small stature. Wellman again shows his mastery of crowd scenes and love of trains. Recommended.

Trailer with commentary from Trailers from Hell (spoiler alert)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uu6XZ-2Y6_w

Very nice clip montage set to “(I Am) A Poor Wayfaring Stranger”.

Heroes for Sale (1933)

Heroes for Sale
Directed by William A. Wellman
Written by Robert Lord and William Miznar
1933/US
First National Pictures (Warner Bros.)
IMDb page
Repeat Viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Collection Vol. 3

 

Thomas ‘Tom’ Holmes: You used to hate the capitalists.
Max Brinker: Naturally. That was before I had money.

William Wellman delivers the epic story of an idealistic “Forgotten Man”  in only 70 minutes.

If Tom Holmes (Richard Barthelmess) didn’t have bad luck, he would have no luck at all. His story begins in the trenches of WWI, where he is assigned with several other men to capture a German officer.  This is basically a suicide mission but Tom does manage to get his man.  Unfortunately, he is badly wounded and his cowardly comrade got the credit and the medals.  Tom is taken prisoner by the Germans, who prescribe morphine to ease his agonizing pain.   By the time he returns to the US, he is addicted.

His supply gradually dries up and he is tempted to embezzle from the bank he works for to satisfy his habit.  He is too honorable for this and tries to get what he needs from a doctor who refuses and then calls the bank on him.  So Thomas is fired and sent to the State Narcotic Farm for a couple of years.

When he is released from the Farm in the early 1920s, Tom has beaten his habit and heads out to look for work and a place to stay.  He gets a job in a commercial laundry and a room in the boarding house of  Mary Dennis (Aline McMahon).  Mary has an instant crush on Tom but after she introduces him to Ruth Loring (Loretta Young) it is love at first sight.  They marry and have a child.

Time continues to march on.  A card carrying Communist has been hanging around spouting all the usual propaganda.  This guy has invented a combination washing machine -mangle (!) that will save much manual labor.  Tom agrees to raise the capital needed to patent the invention only on the condition that the machine will allow workers more leisure time and not result in the loss of jobs.  The laundry owner is agreeable.  But when the owner commits suicide, the new owners throw the agreement in the trash.  The inventor has no problem with this and works with them to install more machines in other cities. Many workers lose their jobs and blame Tom for this.  I’m going to stop here.

I had seen this before and liked it even more this time.  Wellman and the screenwriters kept the story moving through decades of turmoil with masterful economy.  The hero is seen as both an Everyman and as a fully realized individual.  The crowd scenes, in particular, are powerful.  Recommended but be warned it is an unsentimental misery sandwich.

Midnight Mary (1933)

Midnight Mary
Directed by William A. Wellman
Written by Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola; original story by Anita Loos
1933/US
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
IMDb page
First viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 3

Tom Mannering Jr.: [sees Mary in a backless gown across the room at a speakeasy] There, without a doubt, is the most tasty back that these old eyes have ever gazed upon.

This is an OK gangster flick/love triangle done with the typical MGM production values. But the gowns by Adrian are to die for.

Mary Martin (Loretta Young) grew up surrounded by abuse and poverty.  Her friend Bunny (Una Merkel) has been a constant  companion.  Mary’s beauty is the ticket to a way out. She falls in with a gang led by Leo Darcey (Ricardo Cortez).  She participates in a theft by the gang in which a couple of people were killed.  Mary is taken in for questioning.  She does not snitch on anyone and is incarcerated for three years.

When Mary gets out of jail she can’t find honest work.  So it’s back to the gang.  Leo figures she is his private property and for awhile they are lovers.

One night, Tom Mannering Jr. (Franchot Tone), a weathy young lawyer, falls instantly in love with Mary.  But Leo is not going to let her go without a fight.  Mary is torn between her love for Tom and her fear that Leo will kill him.  With Andy Devine as a guy that always seems to be hanging around to provide comic relief.  His schtick gets old pretty fast.

The 20-year-old Loretta Young looks gorgeous and absolutely rocks her many outfits. Cortez and Tone are always a bit bland but do well here.  This one has some particularly juicy double entendres.  I was glad I watched it if only for the clothes and the art deco vibe.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zizWQ_DJSh8

Trailer – I don’t think Loretta plays a prostitute.  She is more of a moll being supported by her gangster boyfriend

Frisco Jenny (1932)

Frisco Jenny
Directed by William A. Wellman
Written by Wilson Mizner and Robert Lord
1932/US
First National Pictures (Warner Bros.)
IMDb page
First viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 3

Frisco Jenny Sandoval: Born in a cellar under a fish market; but, a gentleman, Amah. A real man. Nothing beyond his reach. District Attorney. Governor. Even President.
Amah: Confucius says: Fortunate is the mother of a man-child.

This is sort of like Madame X with an earthquake.  The earthquake is the best part.

The story is set in San Francisco just prior to the 1906 earthquake and fire.  Frisco Jenny Sandoval helps her abusive father (Robert Emmet O’Conner) run a low-rent saloon on the Barbary Coast.  She is in charge of the many prostitutes that ply their trade there.  Jenny is in love with piano player Dan McAllister (James Murray).  They want to marry but Dad won’t have it.  Before the lovers can come up with a Plan B, the earthquake destroys the saloon and kills both Jenny’s father and Dan.

This leaves Jenny a pregnant orphan.  She gives birth in squalor in Chinatown and raises the boy she names Dan for a couple of years.  During this time she decides to open a brothel and eventually has a big success with it.

Jenny is present when her attorney and partner Steve Dutton (Louis Calhern) shoots a man.  She helps him dispose of the evidence.  Dutton advises Jenny to let a wealthy couple adopt her son, at least until the heat is off. But Jenny never gets him back.

SPOILER ALERT

Time marches on and with it Dan becomes a successful athlete and scholar.  He gets a job with the District Attorney’s office and has plans to run for District Attorney.  Dutton wants to reveal Dan’s origins to spoil his chances in the election.   So Jenny shoots Steve.  The film ends with a trial in which Dan unknowingly prosecutes his own mother.

Wellman directs a mean earthquake.  Although this film includes several pre-Code topics it has few light moments or any of that snappy patter I love so much.  The acting is OK.  I always like Louis Calhern.  I hadn’t know his career was so long.  The costumes and sets are lavish.  Unless you are in the mood for a well-made but badly scripted melodrama, I would give this a miss.

Female (1933)

Female
Directed by Michael Curtiz (William Wellman uncredited)
Written by Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola suggested by a story by Donald Henderson Clarke
1933/US
First National Pictures (Warner Bros.)
IMDb page
First viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 2

James – Alison’s Main Butler: It was the custom of Catherine the Great to serve vodka to her soldiers to fortify their courage.

Fun role-reversal movie rushes to its more conventional ending.

Alison Drake (Ruth Chatterton) inherited her father’s automotive company.  She runs it like a pro, barking orders, making split second decisions etc.  She also hires a stable of attractive young men she treats like bimbos.  She asks them to discuss business at her home, plies them with vodka, and lets the fun begin.  One of these is George Cooper (Johnny Mack Brown).  When he brings flowers in the morning, Alison makes it clear that a courtship was not what she was looking for.

Alison thinks the company’s car designs need an upgrade and sends for a prominent design engineer.

One night, Alison goes out cruising the streets incognito and runs into Jim Thorne (George Brent).  They have fun at a shooting gallery and then enjoy dining and dancing Depression style.  Jim wishes her a platonic goodnight, which definitely wasn’t what she was expecting.

Of course, it turns out Jim is actually her design engineer.  None of Alison’s ploys work on Jim, who is a manly man and will do the asking thank you very much.  What’s a girl to do?  No points for guessing correctly. With Ruth Donnelly as a nervous secretary.

The first two-thirds of this movie are immense fun.  Chatterton looks like the cat that swallowed the canary throughout and is clearly enjoying herself.  In the final third, the film races to its moralistic conclusion.  I have become used to this in pre-Code films so I can’t complain to much.  It would have been better if the film ran more than an hour and developed the relationship so that it earned its ending.  Brent is his old reliable self.  That first two thirds makes the film well worth seeking out.

There were three directors on this film.  William A. Wellman shot most of the film after William Dieterle had to bow out due to illness.  Then Jack Warner decided he didn’t like the actor playing the George Cooper part and subbed in Johnny Mack Brown.  Wellman was no longer available and Michael Curtiz re-shot those scenes.  Oddly, Curtiz got the directing credit.

Trailer (basically gives away the plot of the movie)

Three on a Match (1932)

Three on a Match
Directed by Mervyn LeRoy
Written by Lucian Hubbard from a story by Kubek Glasmon and John Bright
1932/US
Warner Bros.
Repeat viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 2

Ruth Wescott: [Referring to Vivian] Some people get all the luck.
Mary Keaton, aka Mary Bernard: [Musingly] I wonder.

I enjoyed this Pre-Code classic.  What a cast!

The film begins on the playground of P.S. 62.  Three middle-school girls are spotlighted. Ruth, the “smart one”, Vivian, “the popular one”, and Mary “the bad one”.  We follow their story as they turn into Ruth (Bette Davis),  Vivian (Ann Dvorak, and Mary (Joan Blondell). Ruth, who couldn’t afford to continue her education, becomes a stenographer.  Vivian marries wealthy lawyer Robert Kirkwood (Warren William) and has an adorable son and lavish lifestyle.  Mary went to reform school and then on to become a chorus girl.

They meet by chance and catch up over lunch.  Vivian reveals that something is missing from her life.  The three become friends.

Time marches on.  Vivian becomes depressed.  Robert agrees she should take a cruise alone with their son.  This brings her into contact with gangster Michael Loftus (Lyle Talbot) and she loses herself to debauchery and addiction.  In her haze, she neglects her son. Things will go downhill from here for Vivian.  Ruth and Mary’s fortunes take a turn for the better.  With Humphrey Bogart in a small role, his first as a hoodlum.

The first half of this movie is great pre-Code fun.  The second half descends into lurid melodrama touching on such pre-Code themes as adultery, child neglect, addiction, and untimely death.  Vivian’s drug of choice looks to be cocaine, which I didn’t know was a thing in 1932.  So we get the complete package.  These actresses are great together and it’s basically a must-see for the pre-Code obsessed.

A Free Soul (1931)

A Free Soul
Directed by Clarence Brown
Written by Becky Gardiner from a novel by Adela Rogers St. John
1931/US
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Forbidden Hollywood Vol. 2

Jan Ashe: [Seductively] Hello, there.
Ace Wilfong, Gangster Defendant: Hello, yourself. Say, it’s great to come up and find you here like this.
Jan Ashe: Is it now? Well, what are you going to do about it?

A very pre-Code take on the pleasures and pitfalls of free love.

Steven Ashe (Lionel Barrymore) is a brilliant, but alcoholic, trial attorney, who has taught his daughter Jan (Norma Shearer) to think for herself. When Jan meets Ace Wilfong (Clark Gable), a gangster her father exonerated in a murder trial, she drops her steadfast fiancé (Leslie Howard) and “gives herself” to him.

The Ashe family has already practically cut off Stephen and Jan.  Then Stephen shows up at a soiree roaring drunk, and that is that.  When Jan takes up with Ace, she is disowned as well.  Both pretend not to care.

Stephen objects violently to Ace but Jan refuses to give him up.  When Stephen’s alcoholism is growing terminal, Jan promises not to see Ace again if her father will stop drinking.  They go on a three-week camping trip together.  But their return to civilization doesn’t go so well.  I will stop here.

It was refreshing to watch a film with a strong female protagonist, even if Norma does recognize the error of her ways by the final frame. The trial scenes, as usual, bothered me. I always watch these with a critical eye and the attorneys and judge almost never fail to trample on every rule of evidence in the book.  Everything else about this movie is A-OK.

I have mixed feelings about Norma Shearer as she usually overdoes it in my opinion.  I was looking at her filmography though and hadn’t realized the number of silent films she made.  I looked at her through those eyes and understood her mannerisms completely.  Lionel Barrymore makes a good drunk, for sure.

Lionel Barrymore won the Best Actor Oscar for his performance in A Free Soul.  The film was nominated in the categories of Best Actress and Best Director.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kk7EYxPoHXs

I love this fan made video (spoiler warning)