Precode Picks #4
Precodes: Anna Christie, The Devil to Pay, Preview to Kong?, and No More Orchids
ANNA CHRISTIE (1930) --- GARBO TALKS! as marquees shouted, but what they should have said was, GARBO TALKS AS THOUGH ON STAGE, which the Anna Christie experience was more/less like, a thing I’d not necessarily knock, as Anna Christie gives us close-as-ever insight to what GG might have amounted to had legit rather than film claimed her. Takes are long, static for that, being 1930 with sound still unaccustomed and customers there to hear Garbo speak and never mind if cameras do anything other than focus dead on her. There is the accent --- everyone knew she'd have it, which was part of fascination, question, if any, whether sense could be made of it. Yes to that, unlike with Vilma Banky or Karl Dane, being unfortunate instances, but they didn’t have Garbo’s magnetism or studio willingness to handle with utmost care. The property was of porcelain pedigree, surefire on stages since Eugene O’Neill penned it to rapturous response. Blanche Sweet had been a silent Anna Christie, but the property needed talk to put power across, for this was sex drama where question was how explicit they would venture toward Anna as woman formerly of the streets who might marry so long as affianced never knows her past. Charles Bickford has persuasive way with growls but fell off Metro payrolls when he growled too at Louis Mayer. Anna Christie did well enough to empower Garbo, already that way for being one star who might get on a boat, sail home (to Sweden), and never look back. She truly could take the career of leave it. Anna Christie is available on Blu-Ray from Warner Archive.
THE DEVIL TO PAY (1931) --- We’re not ten minutes in before Ronald Colman approaches a woman on the street, whom he does not know, and says, “Have no fear for the day … You look divine.” Anyone today who’d intrude upon a stranger with a remark like that might find himself straightaway to police court, but this was 1931 and the man was Ronald Colman, whose voice alone excused whatever liberties he chose to take. I could wish for nerve and panache enough to speak such a line as Colman's, provided I had dulcet tones to speak it. Here is where one recognizes full extent of not being Ronald Colman. Did he offscreen radiate such poise, such assurance? If so, a show-world and otherwise-world surely yielded to his every wish. To simply be Colman was more desired than for him to act as something else, A Double Life disconcerting despite him Academy-awarded for it. The Devil to Pay is Colman as presumed self, a “days in the life …” that we take for mirror of who he was. A whole star system was built upon such illusion, “range” be shunned lest a brand be diminished. People pointed at Parnell as folly for Clark Gable, MGM as instigator, him the goat for yielding. A personality was called that for bearing natural gifts apart from what training could supply. If Colman was nothing like his screen image, then he surely was an actor of remarkable resource. Television robbed movies of primacy by constructing series entirely around personalities and seeing them run years on that single engine. Film stars had not the advantage to show up weekly, closest to that a Clara Bow seen as often as seasons changed, or two-reel comedians, western favorites, served eight times within a year. To tender more might endanger interest in even the most popular names.
REAL LIFE PRECURSOR TO KONG? --- I figured Kong’s stage unveiling for something real life could never hope to approach, but here courtesy the Seattle Post-Intelligencer circa April 20, 1930 is a live attraction “For a Few Days Only” to remind us that Bigger was always Better, especially where the Biggest could be harnessed and put on display for thrill-seekers. What could go wrong? thought Carl Denham when he raised the curtain of Kong, “chrome steel” a safeguard sure as a “Special Glass Enclosed R.R. Car” to contain a 55-foot, 65 ton whale plus presumed offspring at 18 feet and 3 tons. Could mere glass contain such mighty brutes? What if one or both had crashed out? Imagine camera bugs as tactless as those snapping an agitated Kong. We may assume whales did not enjoy being photographed. Picture yourself with nose against the glass for a closest look, and it cracks, loosing leviathans to crush all beneath their massive weight. What of Mama Whale protecting her baby as Kong did Ann Darrow, or Mrs. Gorgo in destructive descent upon London to rescue her young. Is it possible that Kong creatives saw this Seattle spectacle and filed away an idea for their future project? I for one would not have relied upon a sheet of glass, however thick, to shield against two whales in presumed close confinement. Freak attractions were the norm in 1930 and for years before and after. Ask Tod Browning’s cast what it was like to be so exploited. Think too of captive animals brought ashore to amuse gawkers. This sort of thing went on … and on … for so long as hucksters had wildlife or human unfortunates to (unwillingly) prop a show. Remember Herman Cohen hauling “Zamba” the lion into theatre lobbies to promote Black Zoo? Moderns differ from ancient Romans but a sliver it seems.
NO MORE ORCHIDS (1932) --- Caught a chill watching the end of this. Ever had it happen --- when a film intersects uncomfortably with real life, not intended, but based on a future we know but filmmakers could not have? Here (distinct spoiler alert) we have Carole Lombard waving goodbye to dad Walter Connolly as he departs on a plane. What she doesn’t realize is that he’ll pilot the craft smack onto the side of a mountain mere miles off. January 1942 came ten years after No More Orchids was new. Old films often have such stark moments. We sense the father’s sacrifice coming (his bank having failed), but surely things will resolve. This being precode, they don’t. Precode was about more than cocktails and loose sex. Realities were what they’d trade primarily in, likeable characters taking the fall to our surprise, if not always pleasure. Orchid’s story is on one hand a wafer, on the other a thick loaf re life among Depression dwellers barely touched by the Crash, but mindful of how close they are to the precipice. Lombard is a poor (grand)daughter of the rich, fated to marry a Euro prince, who shows up halfway but does not turn out to be a crumb as mere class envy might present him, our hope either way for true love to conquer all (suitable suitor Lyle Talbot not rich, but a better prospect to weather hard times). Gable’s “Peter Warne” of It Happened One Night had plenty such blueprints to follow by 1934, the right-working-guy almost a cliché when Frank Capra and writers got round to it. Capra too had a go with Platinum Blonde the same year as No More Orchids where he’d tread parallel ground. Refreshing in Orchids is older players driving narrative to degree more than customary, Connolly, Louise Closser Hale, also C. Aubrey Smith, who for guilt over tragedy he causes might board a next doomed flight himself. In fact, I envision a panoply of penance in the wake of Orchid’s end title. Seen on TCM in High-Def and highly recommended.
6 Comments:
From what I've read over the years, Colman's gallant charm was no act. The general consensus was that he was a gentleman, although a shrewd negotiator who was not to be taken advantage of. The only mildly negative comments (from solitary sources), indicate that he could be a bit of a ham on occasion. Reportedly, on one JACK BENNY PROGRAM visit, he insisted on a gag line that Benita Hume was to deliver. In THE LATE GEORGE APLEY, Vanessa Brown played a joke during one take, making a funny face as Colman walked her down the aisle, knowing he'd be focused on his profile for the camera. I think the only person he made a negative comment about was Harry M. Popkin (I think there was an issue with getting paid for CHAMPAGNE FOR CAESAR). And I'm fond of recalling that he, Basil Rathbone, Herbert Marshall, and Claude Rains all served in the same division in WWI. What a repertory company that would have been!
I only recall seeing character actress Louise Closser Hale twice. She absolutely aced her strait-laced biddy role in "Shanghai Express". And performed comic wonders every time she cleared her throat in "Platinum Blonde". Look forward to catching "No More Orchids" hoping for a Closser Hale three-peat.
One of Colman's later gigs was "Halls of Ivy", a radio series where he starred opposite his wife Benita Hume. Colman is Todhunter Hall, president of a small collage in a midwestern town. He's a native-born American (Gale Gordon played the part in a pilot) who nonetheless sounds like Ronald Colman. Hume is a vivacious musical comedy star he married in a whirlwind romance during a British sabbatical. There are careful forays into relevance: a Chinese coed faces racism; GIs adjust to college life after seeing combat in WWII; a student is charged with theft; and the prexy must constantly pursue / appease donors and local politicians. In the first season or so there's always a daydream / flashback to the Halls' courtship, allowing the couple to play romantic scenes as well as the usual married banter.
The comedy is low-key, more the occasional chuckle that big laugh, the main attraction being the cheerfully charming leads. The setting is almost bucolic, a smallish town where the college president and his wife live modestly on Faculty Row. The sponsor is Schlitz Beer, whose commercials are amusingly stiff and proper to suit the intellectual tone of Ivy College.
Archive.org has episodes under Audio / Old Time Radio; there are also some CDs floating about.
Apparently none of the cast of CHAMPAGNE FOR CAESAR were ever paid, Popkin convinced them to take a percentage that apparently never paid off even though the film was reasonably successful. I remember Vincent Price in an interview talking about this and saying that whenever he drove past Harry Popkin's house, he would shake his fist at it.
RICHARD M ROBERTS
Garbo tends to leave me cold, but her German-language version of "Anna Christie" is quite good. Unlike the glammed-up English version, she looks more or less like a hooker; in fact, the whole movie, characters and sets alike, appears more tawdry and closer to real life than its English counterpart.
Ronald Coleman reminds me of Cary Grant and Claude Raines -- they're British but they don't have what you'd call British accents. They just sound sophisticated. Same with Chaplin in his talkies. Coleman's influence continued after he died -- I remember a skunk character named Odie Cologonie on the cartoon series "King Leonardo and His Short Subjects" who sounded just like him.
Louise Closser Hale appears in something called 'Captain Applejack' Saturday morning at 8:25 on TCM.
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