Film Review
After the enormous success of
42nd
Street, Warner Brothers weren't slow in following this up with
another musical extravaganza, the even more raunchy and ambitious
Gold Diggers of 1933.
The popularity of this second film, made at the height of the Great
Depression, ensured that the musical would become a staple of Hollywood
throughout the 1930s and beyond, establishing a formula that hardly
ever failed to please audiences.
Gold Diggers of 1933 was the
third screen adaptation of Avery Hopwood's hugely successful play
The Gold Diggers, which ran for 282
performances on Broadway in 1919 and 1920. It followed a silent
version made in 1923 and an early talkie that was released in 1929, the
year of the Wall Street Crash. The music and lyrics for the 1933
version were provided by Harry Warren and Al Dubin respectively.
The film had two directors - Busby Berkeley directed the musical
numbers whilst Mervyn LeRoy took charge of the plot. One of the
stars of the film was Ruby Keeler, who was famously the wife of Al
Jolson. The opening number "We're in the Money" was sung by
Ginger Rogers (later to find fame as the dancing partner of Fred Astaire), who
inexplicably delivered one verse in Pig Latin.
Even when the film is viewed today, the scale, energy and sheer
artistic brilliance of its song-and-dance sequences never fail to
impress. The level of technical skill and creative flair which
went into these is staggering and brought a whole new dimension to the
art of cinema. Each number begins quite simply, with a duet or
solo, and then just grows and grows in size and complexity, mushrooming
into a vast screen-filling spectacle of eye-popping proportions.
In the entire history of cinema, there is hardly anything more
jaw-droppingly amazing than these wonderfully crafted set pieces.
There is a great deal to like about
Gold
Diggers of 1933, but the thing that really impresses is its
final number, "Remember My Forgotten Man". This was inspired by
the well-publicised march to Washington DC by WWI veterans in May 1932
to claim for money they were promised; the Hoover administration
refused to pay up and the ex-servicemen were driven away like
vagrants. This one number conveys not just the bleak mood of the
Great Depression, but also the tragedy of the First World War,
lamenting the shameful manner in which those who fought in the war and
survived were treated when they came back home to an ungrateful
country. This impact of this final sequence is so great because
it is so totally unexpected. It would have been much easier for
the film to have ended with a happy upbeat number with pretty girls
frolicking in skimpy dresses. Instead, what the audiences were
given after ninety minutes of uplifting music and breezy vaudevillian
comedy were several minutes of sombre reflection, reminding them that
however bad things got for them, there were always some who had it
worse, much worse. It's a brave and powerful ending to a
remarkable - and highly enjoyable - film.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Mervyn LeRoy film:
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Film Synopsis
America, during the Great Depression. Life is hard for chorus
girls Polly, Carol and Trixie, who find themselves out of a job when
the show they had been rehearsing is cancelled. Things look
up when impresario Barney Hopkins appears, bubbling with optimism, and
enlists them in his next show. The only downer is that he has no
capital. Polly's boyfriend, Brad Roberts, an aspiring young
songwriter, gives Barney the money he needs, on condition that Polly is
given top billing. Barney is quick to recognise talent and hires
Brad to supply the music and the songs for the show. On the first
night, the leading man injures his back, leaving Brad with no option
but to take his place. The show proves to be a hit, but
Brad's true identity is revealed, setting in motion a bizarre sequence
of events...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.