You'd not sneak sex and depravity ontomainstream screens
during the Code-locked 40's, but ads could bait hook for those who'd imagine
movies had finally cut loose to deliver thegoods. Of course they didn't ---
and wouldn't --- until years later and abandonment of the PCA in favor of a
rating's system. Not that King's Row wasn't strong meat in context of 1941, and
there is plentiful Disgrace, Desire, and Cruelty to go around, but elements
were "Hidden" and "Left Out" from the novel on which
Warner's film was based. A biggest knock Hollywood got from readers in those days
was familiar chorus of "It wasn't as good as the book," an oft-truism thanks to censoring of film content. What mattered for
showmen, however, was filling seats, and that often meant scrapping suggested
ads in favor of lurid art to grab attendance by the collar. The State Theatre
needed that extra jolt, as this was 1946 and King's Row by then had a five
years' growth of beard. Allentown,
Pa.'s State began life as a
vaudeville house in 1906 (originally called the Orpheum). Eventually they went
over to a screen policy. Don't know if Allentown's
was a "Pagan Population," but chances were good they'd come to a show about a fictional one.
1 Comments:
Wow. That ad makes it look like a Kroger Babb epic.
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