Showing posts with label Will Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Will Rogers. Show all posts

5/18/2019

It's a Joke, Son (1947) and Judge Priest (1934) racist comedies

Sometimes I watch movies with an elderly group of senior citizens at a retirement community, where I have some senior friends I visit regularly. There are several movie buffs who frequently watch old movies of every genre. Sometimes the movies shown are very older ones with insensitive jokes that are horribly outdated.

These are two such movies.

It's a Joke Son (1947) features a character that no one today under the age of 70 or 75 will likely remember: "Senator Claghorn", who had a popular (at the time) catchphrase "It's a Joke, Son". The character (a parody of a Southern Senator) was made famous by a radio performer, Kenny Delmar.
Some of the seniors knew of him.

This was the character's first (and only) movie; no follow-ups were made because it wasn't very successful. I suppose a modern equivalent would be from the 1990s when filmmakers made It's Pat and Stuart Smalley into movies (those characters were originally from television's Saturday Night Live).



It's hard to find this funny watching today. The others in the group didn't find it too funny either. The only part I liked is when a young boy about 5 years old helps Claghorn in the kitchen preparing a punch bowl. Since the boy can't read, he pulls out bottles of alchohol from the cabinet thinking its juice an pours it in the bowl. Then the punch is served to a group of Southern Confederate women and they all get tipsy.

There are a few notable stars in the movie, including Una Merkel playing his wife, and June Lockhart playing his daughter.

I think this is one movie where context is required before viewing. The opening scenes show a Confederate flag being raised, and Claghorn saluting it. Then his dog gets up on his hind legs and lifts one paw to salute, too.

I mean, come on. Is this sight gag really that funny?



Being the youngest person in the audience watching the film, I explained to the older film viewers that this would be horribly offensive today, and some of them understood, but one or two didn't see a problem with the film, I don't think. I didn't make a huge case of it since I was only a guest/visitor and not the programmer.

Judge Priest (1934) is yet another horribly dated comedy that I had serious problems with. It takes place in a Kentucy town in 1890, where everyone's a Confederate veteran or patriot, and where lynching is common.

Then we have some black characters, most notably Stepin Fetchit who does his typical subservient act. Rogers treats him in condescending ways when he's supposed to be a tolerant man of the town. Then there's the housekeeper played by Hattie McDaniel - this was her first credited screen role. She has a lovely voice and there's a few scenes of her singing, but she isn't given much to do but serve and cook. I'd rather see an entire film starring her in it. There's a terribly cringe worthy scene where she and Fetchit are together in a kitchen and Fetchit is trying to freeload some baked goods, reaching for a donut as if he's never eaten nor seen one in his life.

I can't stress how dated this is. It's hard for a young, modern, progressive to watch this and enjoy it. There's so much wrong about it.

The title character, a judge on the verge of retiring, is played by Will Rogers, and his character is often described as "open-minded", "fair" and "tolerant.  The introductory prologue to the film says that Judge Priest character we're about to meet seemed "typical of the tolerance of that day and the wisdom of that  almost vanished generation".

Huh? Judge Priest promoting racial tolerance? I don't think so. What movie are they talking about? In one scene Rogers does a poor imitation of Fetchit, and in every scene treats him in a condescending way. This has got to be one of the most dated and offensive movies for a modern viewer.

Most of the movie is made up of vignettes and is without a plot. It's not until the last third of the movie where an actual trial takes place where Judge Priest acts as a defense against the accused.

The climax of the movie comes when the Judge's son serves as a lawyer in a court case where a Confederate is on trial. In the accused's defense, Priest gets a pastor to testify and extol the virtues of a true Confederate patriot. Priest also gets Stepin Fetchin to play "Dixie" on the drums outside the courthouse (he promises him a new coat if he obliges). Fetchit is happy to support the Confederate cause for material goods.

This musical stunt gets all the Confederate jurors emotional, and gets them sentimental for Confederate Patriotism, and eventually let the accused free.  The movie ends with a huge parade with "Dixie" playing and Confederate flags waving by almost everyone in the crowd.

According to the 1934 New York Times film review, the critic reported laughter and tears at the screening.  Tears? Laughter? No one must have batted an eyelash or cringed?

For me, watching this movie was like watching people from another planet. This movie - as well as The Birth of a Nation and some others - is from a different era, a different time, and a different world.

Judge Priest been called "a slice of 19th century American life".  I wouldn't want to live in that town depicted in this film.

A really interesting blog post talks about the racism in the film.

Ford went on to film this story again years later (The Sun Shines Bright in 1953).

3/10/2011

Top 10 Most Popular Movie Stars of 1935

1932| 1933| 1934| 1935| 1936 | 1937 | 1938 | 1939 | 1940 |
1941 | 1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | 1946 |
1947 | 1948| 1949 | 1950 |


The rankings come from Quigley Publishing Co.'s annual list (since 1932) of top money making stars, which based on a poll of hundreds of theater executives. The list does not rank stars only on how much cash their films made, but on what theater owners say about who attracts audiences on their star power alone.


1. Shirley Temple


2. Will Rogers

3. Clark Gable



4. Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers


4. Joan Crawford


5. Claudette Colbert


7. Dick Powell

8. Wallace Beery


9. Joe E. Brown


10. James Cagney

10/11/2009

Mickey's Gala Premiere (1933) - With Celebrity Appearances!

Another classic cartoon short featuring caricatures of Hollywood celebrities of the day. I just discovered this classic Disney cartoon, and had fun trying to recognize all the celebrities. Couldn't recognize some of them, though. Here's a good little synopsis of the cartoon, written by Jon Reeves (imdb.com): Mickey's film is having a premiere, and all the stars turn out at the Chinese Theatre. Among those shown: Laurel and Hardy, the Marx Brothers, Jimmy Durante, Clark Gable, Sid Grauman, Mae West. The picture, Galloping Romance (Pegleg Pete kidnaps Minnie, and Mickey gives chase on a variety of animals), starts, and everyone in the audience sways along to the music, then rolls in the aisles with laughter. After, everyone comes on stage to congratulate Mickey; Garbo smothers him with kisses. Celebrities, in order of appearance: 1. Keystone Cops (L-R: Ben Turpin, Ford Sterling, Mack Swain, Harry Langdon, Chester Conklin) Getting out of limo: 2a. Wallace Beery & Marie Dressler 2b. Lionel Barrymore (in beard as Rasputin), John Barrymore (as Prince Paul Chegodioff), Ethel Barrymore (as Czarina Alexandra) all in costume from the film they were in "Rasputin and the Empress". (Read the Wikipedia post on the film) And more trivia: John Barrymore is the grandfather of Drew Barrymore. 2c. Laurel and Hardy 2d. Marx Brothers 3. Maurice Chevalier 4. Eddie Cantor 5. Jimmy Durante 6. (L-R) Jean Harlow, Joan Crawford, Constance Bennett 7. Clockwise: Harold Llyod, Clark Gable, Adolph Menjou, Edward G. Robinson 8. Ticket Taker: Sid Grauman (of Grauman's Chinese Theater fame) People entering the theater: 9a. George Arliss 9b. Joe E Brown 9c. (crawling on floor) Charlie Chaplin 9d. William Powell 9e. Marx Brothers (over-stuffed coat) 9f. Mae West ("Come up and see me some time!") 9g. Mickey, Minnie, Pluto, Clarabell Cow 10 Seated in theater, front row: Chester Morris, Gloria Swanson, George Arliss Back Row: Helen Hayes, Edward G. Robinson, William Powell 11 Jimmy Durante 12. Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery 13. Caricature of "censorship czar" Will H. Hays (of the "Hays code") 14. Eddie Cantor with Joan Crawford 15. Greta Garbo 16. Front: Marie Dressler, Wallace Beery, and Will Rogers Back: Groucho, Charlie Chaplin, Lionel Barrymore 17. Ed Wynn 18 Bert Wheeler & Robert Woolsey ("Wheeler & Woolsey" comedy duo) 19. Laurel and Hardy 20. Dracula (Bela Lugosi), Mr. Hyde (Frederic March), Frankenstien monster (Boris Karloff) 21. Buster Keaton and Joe E. Brown 22: Falling out of seats: Douglas Fairbanks and Jimmy Durante 23. Rolling in isles: Oliver Hardy, Chaplin, Groucho, Joe E. Brown, Marie Dressler 24. On stage: Will Rogers (pulling Mickey by rope) 25. Shaking hands: Marie Dressler, Joe E Brown, Jimmy Durante, Laurel and Hardy, Edward G, Eddie Cantor, Chaplin, Wallace Beery, George Arliss, William Powell, Douglas Fairbanks, Clark Gable, Fatty Arbuckle, Harold Lloyd, Lionel Barrymore. 26. Getting onstage: Greta Garbo 27. Walt Disney and 2 other men (one of them Warner Baxter-dont' know who the other guy is supposed to be), with Groucho. 28. Pluto the dog Source: 2719hyperion.com a post about classic Disney animation.