Showing posts with label Pat O'Brien. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pat O'Brien. Show all posts

Monday, August 6, 2012

China Clipper (1936) - Glory Days

China Clipper 1936 film poster
"China Clipper" (1936).

"China Clipper" (1936), directed by Ray Enright, is a fascinating film for a number of reasons. It has an early Humphrey Bogart, Pat O'Brien as the heavy, and an unnamed character who became famous worldwide a year after this film was released for reasons he would have preferred to have happened differently. We'll get to him below.


China clipper crew China Clipper 1936 movieloversreviews.filminspector.com
The China Clipper was a beautiful plane!

Let's go back to those days of yore, when reporters cheered when told a plane had landed, when peoples of other nations appreciated US aid and rewarded Americans for it, and when Chinese waited anxiously at the shoreline for American progress to reach them (quite literally, here). That's "China Clipper," an excellent memento of days long gone that manages to preserve a slice of the buccaneering spirit that built the modern world.

Real China Clipper China Clipper 1936 movieloversreviews.filminspector.com
The real China Clipper, flying over San Francisco.

The drama is pedestrian and holds no surprises - what, do you think that increasingly dictatorial airline boss Dave Logan (Pat O'Brien) will fail? - but still manages to hold some interest over seventy years later. Logan fights with everyone, alienating people left and right because they won't do exactly what he wants, but ultimately comes to the shattering realization that the world will continue with or without him. That is the film's real lesson, and it is a good one. Logan loses his wife (Beverly Roberts) along the way (she later cravenly crawls back because she is "lonely" in one of the film's least authentic touches), but the real romantic relationship in the film is between Logan and his company. Humphrey Bogart plays Logan's on-and-off employee who pilots Logan's planes through weather that even modern planes would likely avoid, managing to look stoic while still managing to throw a good right hook on occasion.

Marie Wilson China Clipper 1936 movieloversreviews.filminspector.com
Marie Wilson always livens things up in "China Clipper."

"China Clipper" is good history, even though it is "fiction" (ha! It actually hews closer to real facts than most film biographies). One fascinating detail is omitted because of when the film was made - in real life, only a year later, the navigator on the climactic flight to China piloted by Bogie disappeared in the South Pacific. That was one of many plane crashes during the period, and the navigator's loss at sea is sad in any event. However, this particular navigator's loss has led to a continuing mystery that endures to this day. Fred Noonan was that navigator, but he hadn't yet flown with Amelia Earhart and so was completely unknown and not referenced here. Having disappeared with Amelia while flying to Howland Island, Noonan's exact whereabouts today remain a topic of intense interest and investigation.

Crew China Clipper 1936 movieloversreviews.filminspector.com
Wait, which one is Fred Noonan? He was a member of the flight crew in the real "China Clipper" flight.

"China Clipper" is well worth viewing for the stunning aerial shots of various classic planes, brand new airports (then) and cities around the world that have since changed irrevocably. It's a nostalgic trip down memory lane, when American technical achievements brought the true gratitude of the world.



2017

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Virtue (1932) - Terrific Romantic Gem


Virtue movieloversreviews.filminspector.com poster
"Virtue" starring Carole Lombard and Pat O'Brien.

Carole Lombard, for my money, was the top female star of the 1930s. She lit up the screen with her earthy ways. No prissy girl here - she played real women you might see down at the corner store or in the market. When she wanted something, she went and got it. Raw emotion, on display without reservation. All that, and a stunning beauty to boot. Well, on second thought you might not see that at the corner store too often....

In "Virtue" (1932), directed by Edward Buzzell, Lombard plays a former woman of the streets - ahem - who falls for a cabdriver played by Pat O'Brien. The plot would have been impossible after the Hayes Code came into effect a couple of years later, so this is a rare treat indeed. That Lombard was a streetwalker is really just there to show that she is street-wise and nobody's fool. Which she proves over and over.

Virtue movieloversreviews.filminspector.com Carole Lombard Pat O'Brien
Carole Lombard plays a "streetwise" girl who bemuses cabbie Pat O'Brien.

It was a tough task for anyone to keep up with Lombard, but here, O'Brien manages to hold his own in a rare turn as a romantic lead. The best scenes in the film are their squabbles over breakfast, with the kind of snappy patter that didn't escape the 1930s. At times, one almost expects O'Brien to smash a grapefruit in her face - but that was a different film with other actors. Though Lombard might have found such a scene a hoot to play.

Anyway, as is usually the case with Lombard's films, the plot is just an excuse to allow her to emote and chew the scenery with gusto. It follows the standard plot in early Lombard films, boy hates girl, girl wins boy, boy loses girl.... My favorite scene is when Lombard slaps Shirley Grey silly because she owes her money - "Where's my money???" Also, the ending shot is fabulous because, to me at least, is simply brilliant and wonderfully real.

Virtue movieloversreviews.filminspector.com Carole Lombard Pat O'Brien
Carole Lombard playing a happy homemaker is a subtle in-joke.

There are complications thrown in along the way, and a terrific double cross to resolve the usual pesky legal complication. However, "Virtue" really is just a treat for Lombard fans who want to see her at the top of her game. Catch it when you can, it's well worth your time.






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