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Thursday, 19 April 2012

James Cagney and the Grapefruit

Here's a short clip of the famous 'grapefruit scene' in James Cagney's film Public Enemy. This film was paramount in showing the violence, desperation and treatment towards women occurring in Depression America. Glorifying Gansters!

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Actress of the Month: Ruth Chatterton

This is the begining of my 'Actress of the Month' segment discussing the most famous women of the Precode era. The first, for whats left of the month of April, is Ruth Chatterton who I consider to be the Queen of the Precodes. Below is a short bio of her life and, sadly, her too short acting career.


A strong, modern woman onscreen and off, Ruth Chatterton made her portrayals of feisty, elegant and always articulate society women popular in the Precode Era. At age 14, Ruth followed her passion for acting to a successful stage career staring in such works as, Daddy Long Legs (1914) and The Magnolia Lady (1924). With the coming of sound in 1927, Ruth was brought to Hollywood not predominately for her looks or acting talent but her eloquent speech in a period where sound technology was young and most of the top actors of the period had heavy European accents.  Her most memorable Precode portrayals include as the bold, capable business owner in Female (1933) and the struggling mother, turned brothel Madame during the San Francisco earthquake in Frisco Jenny (1993).  After her acting career slowly died down, Ruth began a successful stint as a novelist and later, broke the gender stereotype, by learning to flying and often navigating around the USA solo. Ruth died age 68 from a cerebral haemorrhage in 1961. 
       



Ruth Cool Quote:  As Alison Drake in Female (1933)

“I know for some women, men are a household necessity; myself, I'd rather have a canary.”


Sunday, 15 April 2012

In the Beginning....

Perhaps you have seen a few early 1930’s films or a couple of Marlene Dietrich or Jean Harlow pictures; but what are Precode films and what made them so provocative? Well, contrary to its name, Precode is not actually before (pre) the code; the code being a list of guidelines for directors and producers to follow when making films. The Motion Picture Production Code, known as the Hays Code was created in 1930 to stop the explicit scenes and themes shown in some films of the silent era. Just watch some of the famous Cecil B. Demille ‘orgies’ in Manslaughter and Madam Satan or the provocative Eric von Strohiem films and you will understand.
                                               The famous Manslaughter (1922) 'orgy'

This was also impacted by rumours of sex, drugs and heavy partying that plagued Hollywood’s image. Most notably the trial of Roscoe ‘Fatty’ Arbuckle, accused of murdering a struggling starlet at a boozing late night party. Also the suspicious death of William Desmond Taylor that seemed fuelled with a cocktail of drugs, alcohol and two famous actresses. 

As a result, film moguls became increasing pressured by religious and social groups to curb the scandals rife in the film community both on screen and in reality. The conflict became an ultimatum – self-censor or be censored. So the moguls chose the easiest route: to formulate a list of guidelines and the promise that it will be fully enforced. At the public helm the moguls installed, Will H. Hays, a Presbyterian elder and the perfect man to present an image of virtue and conservatism. This seemed reputable, but their was one problem; Hays and his employees worked and financially benefited from the film studios – for that period a whopping $100,000 a year. He became an agent answering only to the film corporations. Instead of enforcing the code, Hays job was simply to give the appearance he was enforcing it.


                                                                William H. Hays

The main ways he did this was by appealing to the churches through the retribution avenue, ie. a female character could murder, steal, bed-hop and drink as much as she liked as long as she paid for it in the end. If you look at a film called, Frisco Jenny (1933), Ruth Chatterton plays an unwed mother during the San Francisco Earthquake. After the death of her lover, she becomes a prostitute out of financial necessity. She soon becomes a successful madam but must give up her son for his protection. Although she reunites with him in the end, Chatterton does not admit that she is his birth mother and, thus, loses her child because of her sin.
                                                      Ruth Chatterton Frisco Jenny (1933)

Even though, the code seemed implacable to people outside Hollywood, inside the city of dreams it was the most ignored policy since Prohibition. For the next four years sex, drugs, violence and sin dominated pictures creating the most provocative and frank era of film history.