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Showing posts with label edmund lowe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edmund lowe. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Women of all nations 1931 - War, women and wine


IMDB Link
IMDB rating: 6,1



Director: Raoul Walsh
Main Cast: Victor McLaglen, Edmund Lowe, Greta Nissen, El Brendel, Fifi D'Orsay, Marjorie White, Bela Lugosi



"Flagg and Quirt, the eternally bickering 'friendly enemies' introduced in Lawrence Stallings' WWI play What Price Glory, were at it again in 1931's Women of All Nations. Victor McLaglen and Edmund Lowe reprise their screen characterizations as pugnacious, girl-crazy marine sergeants Flagg and Quirt, who in the course of the film's 71 minutes hopscotch from Panama to Sweden to Nicaragua to Turkey. In Sweden, the boys battle over the affections of icy blonde Elsa (Greta Nissen), while in Turkey they find themselves in the middle of a sheik's harem (where else?). Comic relief El Brendel has the film's best scene, in which he obeys Flagg's order 'Get me the lay of the land' by returning with coquettish Fifi D'Orsay! Humphrey Bogart was supposed to have played the romantic lead in Women of All Nations, but his role was all but eliminated in the final release print." - www.allmovie.com

Download links (Youtube, 5 parts):


Saturday, March 3, 2012

Born reckless 1930 - An early John Ford talkie with its flaws


IMDB link: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0020702/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
IMDB rating: 5,6


Directors: Andrew Bennison, John Ford
Main Cast: Edmund Lowe, Catherine Dale Owen, Frank Albertson, Marguerite Churchill, William Harrigan, Lee Tracy, Ilka Chase



"Born Reckless is a comic look, at a man who is at the fringes of gangdom. The film dances around the edges of the 'gangster picture' as a genre, without ever becoming a full-fledged gangster movie. The film is almost as much of a burlesque of the gangster genre, as Ford's next film Up the River will be of the prison movie.
Based on a true story, this drama profiles the experiences of a young gangster. After getting caught during a robbery, the gangster is given a choice: he can either go to prison or join the military. He chooses the military. However, when he returns home, he returns to gangster life. So the hero starts out as a crook: a member of a gang that commits burglaries. While technically thus a 'gangster', he never becomes a big time criminal, and never becomes involved in bootlegging or other typical activities of Al Capone era gangdom. And he keeps trying to get out of this world, during most of the picture.
Neither Born Reckless nor Ford approve of gangsters. Unlike most 'real' gangster movies, Born Reckless does not idolize or glorify gangsters. Instead, it views them in a negative and satirical light. Born Reckless is based on the novel Louis Beretti (1929) by Donald Henderson Clarke. By 1929, gang tales were popular in stage and prose fiction, as well as movies.
In his long career John Ford shared directorial credit in two other films, Mister Roberts and Young Cassidy. Both were considerably better than Born reckless. Andrew Bennison who was mostly a screenwriter was the co-director, presumably to help Ford over the bumps of the new sound media."

DVD links: