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Showing posts with label Charles J. Brabin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles J. Brabin. Show all posts

Monday, April 2, 2012

Sporting blood 1931 - Gable in his first top billed role


IMDB Link
IMDB rating: 6,2



Director: Charles J. Brabin
Main Cast: Clark Gable, Madge Evans, Ernest Torrence, Lew Cody, Marie Prevost




"Clark Gable went from supporting actor to star in the space of one year with Sporting Blood, adapted from a novel by Frederick Hazlitt Brennan. Gable is top-billed as a gambling house proprietor named Rid Riddell. When the owner of a prize thoroughbred loses heavily in Riddell's establishment, he is forced to give up the horse to the gambler as security. Rid enters the horse in several honest races, then pulls the animal during a crucial race in order to collect big money on the losses; then he plans to dope up the horse to assure future wins. But when the horse loses, the gambler, deeply in debt to mobsters, transfers ownership to one of his female dealers (Madge Evans), and then drops out of the plotline.
This film is a classic example of the old studio system at work. Both Madge Evans, and Clark Gable, were brand new at MGM. The studio bosses weren't at all sure how well either star would fare with the public. In fact, there is a sense of freshness about this film. It hasn't the ordinary Hollywood veneer to it. It makes no pretensions and avoids clichés typical of so many similar films of the 1930s. Evans and Gable are absolutely marvelous in their respective roles. Gable isn't really the lead in Sporting Blood - actually he's something of a rat - but he's the one whom everybody in the audience remembers long after the final fadeout." - www.allmovie.com

DVD links:


Sunday, November 6, 2011

The beast of the city 1932 - A riveting look into the gangster life


IMDB link: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0022660/
IMDB rating: 7,0


Director: Charles J. Brabin
Main Cast: Walter Huston, Jean Harlow, Wallace Ford, Jean Hersholt



"A reluctantly appointed police chief in a crime-riddled city takes his job seriously and works hard to clean the streets of gangsters and to shape up his own corrupt department in this brutal, gritty film noir. Jean Harlow plays a luminescent but ill-fated gun moll.  Adapted by John Lee Mahin from a W.R. Burnett story, and directed by Charles Brabin (The Mask of Fu Manchu), this 1932 talkie is said to be better than average, as a police chief (Walter Huston) sets out to battle organized crime.
This is a very elaborate production for an early 30's film. The camera was surprisingly fluid with some strong cinematography. The Beast of the City was the precursor to many modern crime drama films that pit the gangsters vs. the diligent cops - eventually in a courtroom setting. It was also certainly racy for it's time - made a couple of years before enforcement of the Motion Picture Production Code (also known as the Hays Code), with an exceptional cast."

DVD links: