IMPRISON TRAITOR, PEDOPHILE, AND CONVICTED FELON TRUMP.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

eBOOK SALE THIS WEEKEND - HOLLYWOOD FIGHTS FASCISM!


EBOOK SALE THIS WEEKEND - Continuing the weekend sales of several of my eBooks, this weekend, you can download my HOLLYWOOD FIGHTS FASCISM (which usually sells for $4.99) for $1.99, a 60% savings!


Purchase the eBook SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH or SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH here at my Shopify store...
https://67db75-35.myshopify.com/products/hollywood-fights-fascism

or at Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo and a variety of other online shops at this link. https://books2read.com/u/b6KxEW

Or at Amazon here. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08L36TFM8

Here's some info about the book:

Past is prologue. Our greatest gift from the Greatest Generation was freedom from fascism. Relive, and celebrate, how evil was faced, discussed, dramatized...and fought.

Classic films were a weapon.

The Greatest Generation received instruction, inspiration, and, of course, entertainment from a source that affected them perhaps even more than the greater technology of generations to follow: the movies.

The movies of the day tell us a lot about that generation, that first generation that fought fascism: what was expected of them, what they hoped to achieve, and how they saw themselves. It is not a perfect measuring stick, but the movies of the day show a passion for fighting fascism by everyday people.


The essays in the book were adapted from original posts here at Another Old Movie Blog.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Terror Aboard - 1933



T
error Aboard
(1933) is an eerie mystery that, though from the Pre-Code era, feels more like a noir film of a later period with its flashbacks and cynicism.  However, we have Charles Ruggles in a comedy relief role to break the omnipresent gloom, and that certainly anchors us to the Pre-Code days.


This is my entry into the Classic Movie Blog Association’s “Early Shadows and Pre-Code Horror Blogathon,” and you can find many more terrific blogs participating here.


A ship, perhaps a fishing boat, travels through murky fog, blasting its horn to warn any unseen vessel.  As the fog clears, they see a yacht a short distance away, and they sound the warning again and try to make contact, but there is no reply, and the boat seems adrift.  


Curiously, from this distance, they can see no one on board.  The captain takes a small detail of men, including the ship’s doctor, and takes a launch over to the yacht to investigate.  The camera cuts to the other side of the yacht, where a man leaps into the water, unseen.  We will get back to him later.  This post, as usual, is awash with spoilers.


As the captain and his men cautiously roam about an empty ship, one of them is clubbed from behind.  They find passengers on the boat at last—dead ones.  A woman is found lying in a hallway—frozen to death.  A man is found hanging in a cabin. The captain mutters morosely, “This is some kind of devil ship.”


Suddenly, a fire breaks out in the engine room, and they quickly retrieve the bodies they’ve found and prepare to leave the yacht.  They also find a telegram addressed to a man named Krieg that had been sent two days earlier, which reads, “grand jury indicted you for forgery and grand larceny…”  This Krieg is bankrupt, and the police are after him.


Now we drop into our first flashback.  We meet Krieg himself, a dapper middle-aged man with a trim mustache, played by John Halliday.  He owns this yacht.  


As he reads the telegram he has just received, he ponders his situation—and we are launched into a second flashback, to October 1929, when the stock market crashes and mobs run on banks, and men swarm in panic on the stock exchange floor. 


The crash of 1929 made for a dismal and sickening backdrop for movies of the Great Depression.  Just its mention, or even the image of falling stocks on a ticker tape was easily recognizable shorthand for catastrophe.  Cinematically, it need not be explained. Certainly, through the decade of the 1930s, repercussions still stung from this event. 


Mr. Halliday, natty in his yachting cap and uniform jacket, visits the ship’s radiographer, played by William Janney, who sends and receives the telegrams.  He knows Janney has seen the message, for he deciphered the Morse code.  He has a companionable chat with him, talking of wanting to live on a nearby deserted island, lays out his plans to change course for it, but Janney seems obtuse either to what might be both a bribe and a threat. He only catches on when Halliday takes out a gun.  Because the camera is cut away from the instant the gun is fired, and we see only Janney’s expression of horror, we are teased into thinking that Halliday has shot himself, committing suicide. 


Then, after a long, rather agonizing pause, Janney falls, slumping to the floor, his white uniform covered in blood.  Halliday sets the scene to make it look as if Janney committed suicide.  Then he takes the guest list of passengers.


We get to meet them one by one, and their relationship to Halliday is briefly etched.  Verree Teasdale is an older woman, the wife of his business partner, encouraging ingenue Shirley Grey in Miss Grey’s forthcoming nuptials to Mr. Halliday.  Yet Grey seems troubled, and perhaps not entirely at the age difference between them. They will marry when the yacht reaches Australia.  We soon learn that she really loves Neil Hamilton, but they had quarreled.


Miss Teasdale will have her own marital problems come to the fore, as she is pursued in an adulterous relationship with Jack LaRue.  Morgan Wallace, Teasdale’s husband, will fight with LaRue and LaRue will knife him to death with a letter opener.  This violence is, however, subtly orchestrated by Halliday.  We come to understand he wants to eliminate his passengers.  We will see his hand scratch their names off the passenger list as they die.


Complicating his plans is the late addition to the guests on board when his fiancĂ©e’s former love, played by Neil Hamilton, arrives unexpectedly by plane, which he ditches in the ocean near the yacht.  He has been tracking down Shirley Grey to reunite with her.  We see a hand add his name on the passenger list, like an additional chore on a things-to-do list. Hamilton is handsome, rugged, flies a plane, and we assume he may be better equipped to cheat death on this cruise than the other passengers, perhaps even saving Miss Grey, to boot, but they end up getting locked in the engine room.  Where a fire breaks out. “It’s all right, darling.  We’ll get out of this somehow.”

Hamilton, you may recognize as the future Commissioner Gordon on the Batman TV series in the 1960s.

There is a poisoning, a hanging, and Verree Teasdale gets locked into the ship’s meat locker, where she freezes to death, and more names are scratched out.


Charles Ruggles has a prominent role as a ship’s steward, and he is comic relief, bumbling around, playing the amiable coward, terrified by all the murder around him, clutching at lucky charms.  We might assume that he will survive because God protects bumbling clowns, at least in old movies.

The captain of the yacht, played by Stanley Fields, begins to suspect Halliday of the horrific deeds.  Meanwhile, the crew grumble among themselves, worried and wanting to escape, and finally they rush a lifeboat, but Halliday shoots them.


Then a blast from a ship’s horn in the fog, and we are immediately taken back to the present when the yacht is seen drifting at sea.  The ship pulls up alongside the yacht, and captain and crew investigate.  Halliday, we discover, lurking about, is the one who smacked the sailor on the head.  He starts the engine room fire, and he is the man whom we earlier saw leaping from the yacht into the sea to swim for it.

Against all odds, Neil Hamilton and Shirley Grey are rescued from the fire, and all are speedily removed from the burning yacht to escape to the other ship.


John Halliday, whether driven mad by his indictment over the stock collapse or whether he was just a diabolical manipulator who was determined to win at all costs, is seen at the end of the film being pursued by a shark.  Horror begets horror, but it seems as if, as with many Pre-Codes, the just desserts are not a moral indictment, but a cheap thrill to round out the final reel. 

For more fun with spooky Pre-Code ne’er do wells, have a look at these great posts at the Classic Movie Blog Association’s “Early Shadows and Pre-Code Horror Blogathon,” and you can find many more terrific blogs participating here.

Terror Aboard can currently be seen on YouTube.

 

  *******************************


My new non-fiction book, CHILDREN'S WARTIME ADVENTURE NOVELS - The Silent Generation's Vicarious Experience of World War II -- is now available in eBook here at Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo, and a wide variety of other online shops.

Or here from my Shopify store if you want to buy direct from me and avoid the big companies.

And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.

It is also here in paperback from Ingram.

And here in hardcover from Ingram.

From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books.  From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation. 

 

 

Monday, November 10, 2025

CMBA Awards


Many thanks to the voters of the Classic Movie Blog Association for the honor of this award for my essay on Massacre (1934), which you can read here.  CMBA is a class act, and I would encourage any classic movie blogger to apply to join our ranks.  

Thursday, November 6, 2025

If You Could Only Cook - 1935

 


If You Could Only Cook (1935) is another Depression-era screwball comedy that uses the Great Depression as a springboard to humor. It also serves as a backdrop to contrast the silliness with the bleak realities of everyday life that presented challenges and provided plots.


Like Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1935), a movie of the same year that we discussed recently here, this movie also features star Jean Arthur and brings along favorite gravely-voiced tough guy Lionel Stander in a supporting role.  He is one of the few clear-eyed and sensible people in this movie who wears his cynicism like a shield.  Everybody puts up defenses in the Great Depression, and some have more survival skills than others.

On the other end of the spectrum of cynicism is Frieda Inescort in a brief role as the bluenose fiancĂ©e of Herbert Marshall, who slyly seems to drive him to the altar in the manner of closing a business deal.  She has social standing in a respected old family that has, through generations, lost its fortune.  Marshall is new money, an automotive engineer who owns his own car manufacturing company.  She and her former debutante friends see it as the perfect match.



The movie opens on their wedding rehearsal in the family mansion, their friends and attendants, like Miss Inescort, just going through the motions of what a real, meaningful wedding celebration should be.  When Herbert Marshall leaves after the rehearsal to return back to work and a board meeting at his company, we see that he is not exactly happy.  Though he looks forward to his wedding, a sadness, a sense of dissatisfaction nags at him.  Frieda Inescort neither requires nor wants wooing.  Herbert is a romantic, and would like to have the experience of sentimental romance with a partner who could share life as an adventure. 


He faces disappointment at work, too.  His executive board does not approve of his new, futuristic, and somewhat cartoony designs for a line of autos.   He is told, “This company is in no condition to spend money on wild ideas” for his car designs, because the public has no money to spend on the cars.

Herbert’s response is a bit of fiscal cheerleading: “This country’s on its feet again, and soon it’ll be spending as it never did before.”

By 1935, the year of this film’s release, the policies of President Franklin D. Roosevelt did reduce unemployment since he took office in 1933 (and would continue to drift downward as the decade ended) but we were a long way from spending as we never did before.  When it comes to survival tactics, Mr. Marshall's character survives the gloom by being naively optimistic.


But fed up with his frustrations at his company, as well as in his personal life, he goes to a park as a brief respite, an afternoon’s escape to brood.  It turns into the kind of adventure he would have liked to have with his fiancĂ©e, Frieda Inescort.  Instead, he is a far luckier man; he discovers Jean Arthur.

She is on the bench he has chosen to sit upon and brood, reading the want ads in a newspaper, her suitcase by her side.  She’s down to her last nickel and has lost her digs.  But her survival skill is grit, determination, and belief in herself.  By his presence in the park in the middle of the day and perhaps by his dejected demeanor, she assumes he is also out of a job.

“Jobs are hard to find, aren’t they?” she remarks sympathetically and offers him the “help wanted-male” section.  “It’s tough these days.  About 200 people for every position.”  Not unlike today.

We are given to understand she is used to office work, but she comments, perusing the servant positions, that “the only good ones are for couples,” a cook and butler, fetching $175 per month.  “That’s real money.”

Mr. Marshall, amused, responds, echoing the title, “Now if you could only cook.”

She admits to being a good cook, having kept house for her widowed father since she was a girl.  Then a light dawns and she suggests they apply for the job together as a cook and butler.


Here we have a switch in the usual screwball scenario: she is the practical schemer, and he is the “madcap heiress,” persuaded to go along on a ridiculous romp.  It’s a fun premise, and since one never takes fairy tales or screwball comedies seriously, we do not wonder why, since he’s rich, he just doesn’t find her a job in his corporation.  He clearly takes an interest in her and wants to help her, but with very human self-interest, he sees this as a final escapade before resigning himself to the seemingly inevitable world of a dull marriage and an unfulfilling career.


Their prospective new employer is a gangster and former bootlegger played by Leo Carrillo, who fancies himself a gourmand and is especially pleased with Jean Arthur’s demonstration of merely holding a clove of garlic over a pan of sauce to infuse its flavor (I want to think she was putting him on, but again, one should never look for sense in a screwball comedy). 

Lionel Stander is Carrillo’s right-hand man, who vets all employees and anyone ever trying to get close to his boss.  He is shrewd and will soon suspect the new butler and cook are not what they seem.  Carrillo, for all his dangerous authority, is as grandiose as a character in an opera, flighty, passionate, and with the kind of zest for life we sense Herbert Marshall would like to have.

The “couple” is shown to their new digs—a room over the garage.  It has one double bed.


Mr. Marshall will take a daybed couch out on the porch, assuring her with good humor that she does not need to worry about being unable to lock the door.  When Jean retires that night to the double bed, he climbs down the trellis and heads back to his apartment to get clothes and to get a few lessons in how to be a butler from his own butler, played by Romaine Callendar.  Callendar, from an old English acting family, did a lot of stage work, and this was his first film since a couple of silents in 1918.  He frequently played butlers.

Bess Flowers, our favorite uncredited extra, can be spotted at the wedding rehearsal.

Romaine Callendar teaches Herbert Marshall to greet people at the door.  The wedding is a week away.  Herbert has one week of fun left.


Soon, the lark turns complicated, as both begin to experience possessive feelings for one another, if not love.  She is annoyed and complaining when she discovers he has been out all night, and dismisses his excuse of returning for his clothes, as if he is a wayward husband caught carousing.  When Leo Carrillo, who begins to fancy Jean, puts his amorous moves on her, Herbert gets angry, warning Carrillo off, defending his “wife.”

And bloodhound Lionel Stander, discovering their separate sleeping arrangements, does not believe they are married.  But they fight as if they are married.


The experience has woken Herbert Marshall up—he wants more from life than this playful situation, and decides to return to his company at night, take his experimental designs for cars, and start over.  He shows the designs to Jean, and she likes them, taking far more interest in his work than Frieda does.  They are lounging on the double bed with the designs, and he kisses her.  It’s okay, though, both of them still have their feet on the floor.

But Lionel has followed him, and he thinks Marshall has broken into the company to steal the designs.


It’s their day off and they plan to meet for lunch, but Jean says first she has an errand.  She takes his designs to sell to another company, hoping to give Marshall the confidence he needs in his work.  But the company notifies the board of Marshall’s company that Jean has stolen these designs that belong to them.  Poor Jean is nabbed by the cops, but Lionel Stander, who follows pretty much everybody, tells the boss that Jean is being interrogated, whereupon Leo Carrillo sends his boys to get her out.

Neither Lionel nor Jean thinks, at this point, that the designs are really Herbert’s, because he has used a fake name, and they think he has stolen the designs.

Leo Carrillo criticizes Jean for being so naĂŻve.  “How did you happen to fall for it?”

She replies helplessly, “The Depression.”

Stander adds, incredulously, “I’ve heard of a lot of things blamed on the Depression.”  The Depression, like Bess Flowers, always gets a bit part in 1930s screwball comedies.

When they discover that Herbert is the famous car manufacturer, Jean is angry and humiliated, thinking he was just “slumming” at her expense, and Leo Carrillo helpfully says he has arranged a hit on him.

Jean is aghast and asks him to call it off, because…ready?  She loves him.


Herbert, without much enthusiasm, has shown up in a morning suit (or should that be "mourning"?) for his nuptials, and Leo, who has become protective of Jean, sends his boys into the middle of the ceremony to kidnap Herbert.  He’s not unwilling to go, but holding the wedding party and guests at gunpoint is pretty funny.


The mob brings Herbert back to Jean, who is still mad at him, but the gangsters trick Jean into revealing her true feelings by pretending to shoot Herbert. 

“Darling!” she sobs in his arms.

If it’s an odd way to find romance, well, blame it on the Depression.

 *******************************


My new non-fiction book, CHILDREN'S WARTIME ADVENTURE NOVELS - The Silent Generation's Vicarious Experience of World War II -- is now available in eBook here at Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo, and a wide variety of other online shops.

Or here from my Shopify store if you want to buy direct from me and avoid the big companies.

And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.

It is also here in paperback from Ingram.

And here in hardcover from Ingram.

From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books.  From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation. 

 


 

 

 

Thursday, October 30, 2025

Halloween in "Meet Me in St. Louis"


Meet Me in St. Louis
(1944) celebrates Halloween in a manner that probably had not been done before in movies, or even since.  Here, it is a time for children’s mischief and pranks, but the treats are a holiday spread for the entire family, a cozy home-party with no costumes or gory decorations. 

The movie takes us through an entire year of a family living in St. Louis, Missouri, from the summer of 1903 through the spring of 1904, and the four seasons each make up an “act” in the story.  The summer begins with anticipation for the building of the fairgrounds for next year’s St. Louis World’s Fair – or as little Margaret O’Brien grandly announces, “The Louisiana Purchase Exposition.”

The Technicolor musical is a lovely feast for both the eyes and ears, and parties and special events are opportunities to move the plot along in song.  Christmas, famously, is the winter portion of the movie and the climax of the story, where Judy Garland, the second-oldest daughter and middle child of five kids, croons the touching and sweetly sad, “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” to console Margaret O’Brien over the dismal prospect of the family moving away from St. Louis.

Spring is the shortest act, where the loose ends of the tale are tied up and we have our happy ending strolling through the magnificent grounds of the World’s Fair.  Before all that, however, we have an autumn interlude, which is a big chunk of the movie.

Judy has barely made an inroad to her romance with Tom Drake, “The Boy Next Door,” and the older brother, played by Henry H. Daniels, Jr., isn’t even in this segment because he’s away at college. Most of the segment focuses on the two little girls, Margaret O’Brien and Joan Carroll, who dress in costumes that came out of a rag bag and join neighbor kids on the street, who are piling scraps of wood and furniture on a bonfire in the road.  They break up into commando units to play pranks on neighbors. 


Mother Mary Astor, as her girls are getting ready to join the fun, reminds them that a neighbor lady has folded up a hammock and set it aside for the kids to “steal,” but would they please return it when they’re done.  This tells us that Halloween is intended to be more mock hooliganism than the actual thing—at least until young Margaret and Joan make a thrilling escape from a policeman after an attempt to derail a trolley.


Even before that surprising finale to the evening, we might raise our eyebrows at the idea that Margaret must prove her courage to the other kids by marching up to a feared, forbidding neighbor about whom they tell gross rumors of being a wifebeater and killer of cats, and throw a handful of flour into his face, screaming that she hates him (Grandpa Henry Davenport has advised her to wet the flour first, that way it will stick better). This is to break a banshee spell.  She does the job, albeit trembling all the way, and he, nonplussed, wipes the flour off his face as if he knows it’s just a Halloween thing not to take seriously, like the lady who allows her hammock to be stolen as long as she gets it back.  Margaret becomes a hero to the other kids, and her assault on a neighbor is apparently a rite of passage.


More concerning to today’s parents might be the sight of small children burning half the crates and small tables in the neighborhood in a huge bonfire in the road, unsupervised, if not unsanctioned. 

I can remember in the dim recesses of my childhood watching my father burn autumn leaves in the road by the curb, and also in a large rusty metal barrel, taller than me, meant for that purpose.  But it’s nothing I or my friends would have been allowed to do ourselves.

Halloween, despite the modern decorations meant to induce horror, has become a much tamer thing for children.


And apparently, far less civilized and mature for the adults (compared to today).  We see the family in the movie sitting down to a table with cake and apples, and the bounty of the season, for it seems more a celebration of harvest and autumn as a completion of another phase in the year.  As family maid and cook, Marjorie Main, blithely announces as she sits down with the family to enjoy her own piece of cake, “Well, here it is Halloween, and we’re all another year older.”


Just as we settle into a cozy Victorian parlor scene, chaos erupts.  Margaret O’Brien returns with a bloody lip and a tale of being attacked by Tom Drake.  Judy runs next door to belt Tom.  We assume this will not help their romance. A doctor is summoned (for Margaret, not Tom), and Margaret receives a few stitches, is tucked into bed with treats and made a fuss over—enjoying her invalidism immensely. Joan Carroll returns and excitedly tells Margaret what she missed when she left the fun—that the dummy “body” the kids placed on the trolley nearly derailed it, and they had to run from the constable.  Tom Drake had saved the girls from the police by hiding them down an alley, but they scoff at his interference.  As Margaret notes with a superior air, “As if anybody ever pays attention to girls!”

But a worse calamity suddenly befalls when Papa Leon Ames returns home, triumphant with the news that he is being promoted at his law firm and the family will be moving to New York.

Goes over like a lead balloon, and the family gives him the cold shoulder, from Grandpa down to little Margaret, and one by one, upset, they leave the parlor. 


Mom Mary Astor repairs the damage by soothing Pop, sitting down at the piano and playing the Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed tune “You and I.”  I don’t know if she’s really playing on the track, but you can see for yourself her “playing” is confident and realistic—as Mary Astor was a trained pianist herself.  Pop drifts towards the piano, putting down his cake, and wistfully begins to sing, but the sweet duet is dubbed, however.


One by one, the family all return to the parlor, resume the cake-eating, drawn by the sound and the comforting scene of their parents’ fine example of “life goes on.”  The family unit is all that matters.


The Halloween scene had moments of treats and tricks, and serves to put proper perspective on life’s challenges.  It’s easy to fight off pretend goblins and make-believe doom; it’s a lot scarier to face moving away from your comfortable house, your friends, and everything familiar to be forced into the great unknown.

*******************************


My new non-fiction book, CHILDREN'S WARTIME ADVENTURE NOVELS - The Silent Generation's Vicarious Experience of World War II -- is now available in eBook here at Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo, and a wide variety of other online shops.

Or here from my Shopify store if you want to buy direct from me and avoid the big companies.

And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.

It is also here in paperback from Ingram.

And here in hardcover from Ingram.

From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books.  From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation. 

 


Saturday, October 25, 2025

Requiescat in pace - June Lockhart


Farewell to June Lockhart, who passed on October 23rd, having reached her 100th birthday last June.  She was another treasured link to the Golden Age of Hollywood, before she became better known to younger generations through two television series and guest spots.


We will remember her as Belinda Cratchit, her real-life parents Gene and Kathleen Lockhart playing Bob Crachit and his wife in A Christmas Carol (1938), and as Lucille Ballard in Meet Me in St. Louis (1944).  She had a brief role in Keep Your Powder Dry (1945) here.

She also won a Tony Award in 1948 for Outstanding Performance By a Newcomer in For Love or Money.

It is a triumph to reach the century mark, but especially gratifying when one has lived a life so full of personal and professional accomplishments.




Thursday, October 9, 2025

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936)


Mr. Deeds Goes to Town
(1936) is a thoughtful commentary on the Great Depression masquerading as a screwball comedy.  There are screwballs aplenty, to be sure, but director Frank Capra, as is his wont, manages to show humanity’s noble fight against cynicism in a world full of bad guys lining up to crush us.


Gary Cooper is Mr. Deeds, a flaky, tuba-playing writer of greeting card poems who could be called a misfit except that he fits in very well in the small Vermont community where everybody else is also marching to the beat of their own drum.  It is only when he goes to town – New York City, that he stands out as an oddball.  Mr. Deeds is idealistic, but suspicious of the motives of people who turn out to actually have ulterior motives—making him strangely canny for someone so naĂŻve on the surface.  He is gentle, except for when he belts people in the mouth for pushing his buttons.  He is liberally generous to some, and yet expects to get value from his charity from others and admires those who have enough pride to not ask for his help.


Gary Cooper plays the role that fits him like a glove with such ease and believability that his co-star, Jean Arthur, no less capable in her trademark role as the sassy foil, makes it difficult for us to decide who is the more fascinating.  It is a case, perhaps, of two actors who employ the same method of effortlessly charming us by apparently just amusing themselves. 


Just as he can be a bit vague and preoccupied when spoken to, she also seems distracted by other thoughts, or maybe just has the ability to keep more than one idea in her mind at the same time.  When he is approached by the lawyers for the estate of his deceased uncle, he listens with only one ear, busy with his tuba, or dashing off to the window to watch a passing fire truck.  When her editor speaks to her, Jean Arthur is playing with a piece of rope or a puzzle toy, seemingly not listening but taking in every word he says.  Cooper’s and Miss Arthur’s characters are more alike than even they realize.


Gary Cooper is brought to New York to accept the inheritance left to him, which includes a large mansion and a great fortune.  We see he’s a babe in the woods in the big city, but the estate attorney, played by Douglass Dumbrille, steers him to social obligations and financial investments.  Mr. Dumbrille’s motives are not fiduciary, however.  He attempts to get Cooper to make him power of attorney so that he can control the money and live high off the hog on it, just as he did when the uncle was alive.


Lionel Stander is great in the role of the savvy, snarky man on board to control the press.  He is a gravely-voiced tough guy, with more of East Side in him than the gloss of Mr. Dumbrille, and is as disdainful as he is incredulous that Cooper is unfazed by the fortune and actually seems to not particularly want it.


We are treated to a glimpse of Franklin Pangborn as one of the harried tailors trying to measure and outfit Mr. Cooper as he animatedly discusses business with Mr. Dumbrille.

Jean Arthur is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist given the assignment of getting a story on the new millionaire in town, Mr. Cooper, and she pretends to be a poor soul trudging about town looking for a job.  When Cooper escapes his bodyguards for a bit of freedom, he encounters her one rainy night on the sidewalk in front of his mansion, fainting from hunger.  


He brings her to a cozy restaurant where she is revived with a meal, and after she tells him her story, assuring him she has just gotten a job and starts tomorrow and does not need further help from him, he is charmed, and calls over a violinist playing sad and sweet music.  


Her face, coyly partially hidden under the cloche hat, beams. She is enchanted and he very quickly falls in love.  


His face, reacting to the pleasure of treating her thus, is a marvel of sweetness and boyish enthusiasm.  One of his goals in life is to meet a woman who is a damsel in distress that he may save, and he thinks he has found her.


The romp begins when he recognizes famous literati at the next table and wants to meet them.  They are invited to join the party, mainly because the literary men know he is the famous newly rich composer of greeting card schlock and they want to make fun of his work.  Jean is wary, she’s not sure if he realizes he is being mocked, but he’s not as naĂŻve as he sounds.  He knows very well they are mocking him and he calls them out for their bad manners.  It ends with him throwing punches, but one drunken poet, played by Walter Catlett, who gets a charge out of seeing his colleagues thrashed, befriends Cooper and wants to do the town with him.  Off they go. 

Cooper, introduced to alcohol, spends the evening on a spree, including such antics as feeding a horse a bag of donuts.  He will end up being brought home by two cops without his clothes.  Jean leaves the two drunken fellows with the staff photographers who are sneaking behind them, and heads home to write her article on Cooper, dubbing him “Cinderella Man.”  (However, we know that he’s not the real Cinderella Man; that’s boxer James J. Braddock, who was dubbed thus by writer Damon Runyon the year before Mr. Deeds was released.  See the movie Cinderella Man – 2005.)


Her editor, played by George Bancroft is pleased and wants to know how she managed getting through the bodyguards, the PR tough guy Lionel Stander, and a crop of flunkies.  She remarks offhandedly, “I was the world’s sweetest ingenue.”  She is to be awarded a month’s pay with salary. 

Cooper, reading the headlines the next day, is obviously furious and wants to know whom he can punch (Jean has used a false name with him), but he consoles himself with another date with his dream girl.


They ride the double-decker buses through the city and he gets to see Grant’s Tomb in a lovely moment of wonder and patriotism.  She is moved by his respect for history and great men, and he unknowingly throws a shaft of conscience at her with the remark, “What puzzles me is why people get so much pleasure out of hurting each other.”


On a park bench, they perform a duet of “Swanee River” and “Humoresque” with humming and pretend tuba playing and drumming with sticks on a trash can.  It’s pretty good. I would have liked to see them rehearse that one.


Later, we see Jean’s digs, which she shares with pal Ruth Donnelly, who unfortunately does not have a large role, but we see she is an artist while Jean types her column on a big old typewriter on the coffee table in the living room.  As she composes another hit piece on Cinderella Man, we see she is feeling guilty and having a change of heart.  “I’m crucifying him,” she says, and the theme of the hero being crucified is another favorite Capra trope.  We see it as well in Cooper’s role in Meet John Doe (1941), which we discussed here, and by James Stewart in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), also starring Jean Arthur, which we discussed here.

But he does make good copy.  He abruptly ends a soiree in his mansion for the opera set, scattering them with disdain and critiquing their pomp.  He writes a poem to Jean that sounds like the opening salvo to a marriage proposal.


Then the inevitable.  Lionel Stander discovers his dream girl and the writer of the articles is the one and the same, and he shows the proof to Gary Cooper, who is stunned, his very stillness and the way the director just lets the film roll is something wonderful.  There were not a lot of male actors who could use their faces as effectively as Cooper.  He truly had an ability to show the character’s innermost soul with his eyes and a very slight twitch of his expression.  We see he is shocked, but also deeply heartbroken as if he might cry.  After what seems like a long while, he turns his back to Stander and faces a window, lightly touching a curtain in an absent way.  


Stander moves us as well with a quiet, “If I knew you were going to take it so hard, I would have kept my mouth shut.  Sorry.”


Cooper, however, is dragged from the depths of despair by a man who breaks into the mansion with a gun.  He is a desperate farmer out of work and he accuses Cooper of being just another heartless millionaire.  He angrily reminds him of the outrageous antic of feeding donuts to a horse.   “You never give a thought to all the people starving,” and that there were people in the world who could not feed their children or themselves.  He is played in this wonderful scene by stage and movie veteran John Wray.  He did nine movies in this year of 1936, all bit parts and most uncredited.  Stander, by the way, did eight this year.

He collapses in tears and apologizes for brandishing a gun, saying he lost his head.  “Standing in the breadlines.  Killed me to take a handout.”  Cooper gets him food and watches him eat.  The wheels begin to turn and he gets an idea of what to do with the fortune he never wanted anyway.

He will offer 100 acres, a horse, a cow, and a plow to as many destitute farmers as his money will provide for, some 2,000, and he sets up headquarters in the grand foyer of his mansion, with staff to help, including the converted Lionel Stander, and soon his home is filled with applicants. 


Douglass Dumbrille is not happy, nor a pretender to the family fortune who shows up with his gold-digger wife late in the game.  Lawyer Dumbrille now brings a suit against Cooper, charging him with insanity and needing to be put under his guardianship.  H.B. Warner is the head judge, and the public hearing is swamped with deponents, expert witnesses, and a whole lot of “forgotten men.”  Jean is there, too, trying to make up to Gary Cooper and to help his case and keep him from being institutionalized.

He wants nothing more to do with her.  He will not even defend himself.  As part of his charge against Cooper’s philanthropy, Douglass Dumbrille builds his case on the aspect even more egregious than insanity: philanthropy itself. (Capra, a conservative Republican, had been once poor himself and did not mind pointing out the flaws in oligarchs.)  “In these times, with the country incapacitated by economic ailments and in danger with an undercurrent of social unrest, the promulgation of such a weird, fantastic, and impractical plan as contemplated by the defendant is capable of fomenting a disturbance from which the country may not soon recover.  It is our duty to stop it. Our government is fully aware of its difficulties.  It is capable of pulling itself up out of its economic rut without the assistance of Mr. Deeds or any other crackpot.”  One wonders if he includes President Roosevelt in that number.  One wonders if Capra did.


Two of the witnesses are a pair of sisters, played by Margaret Seddon and Margaret McWade, from Cooper’s Vermont hometown who insist he is nuts, or “pixilated.”  Afterward, when Cooper addresses them in his cross-examination, we learn they think everyone is pixilated except themselves.

But at first, he will not defend himself and remains stubbornly silent.  It is only when Jean, harassed by Mr. Dumbrille into admitting she loves Cooper, that he relents and gets the gumption to fight for himself.


We have our happy ending when Cooper retains his freedom, his fortune, and is allowed to give it away to help end the Great Depression.  He scoops Jean Arthur up into his arms and inexpertly kisses her. 

We learn that when money is absent, pluck will go a long way to aid in survival.  It might even have been true.

    

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My new non-fiction book, CHILDREN'S WARTIME ADVENTURE NOVELS - The Silent Generation's Vicarious Experience of World War II -- is now available in eBook here at Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo, and a wide variety of other online shops.

Or here from my Shopify store if you want to buy direct from me and avoid the big companies.

And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.

It is also here in paperback from Ingram.

And here in hardcover from Ingram.

From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books.  From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation. 

 

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