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Warner Brothers/Photofest

Barbara Stanwyck as Lily Powers and Theresa Harris as Chico in Alfred E. Green’s Baby Face, 1933

New York’s Film Forum—one of the most enterprising movie theaters in the city—has been throwing a most elaborate eightieth birthday party, comprising sixty-six feature films, and a wealth of selected extras, from the year 1933—a year elsewhere commemorated by recollections of the ascension to power, in January, of Adolf Hitler as German chancellor, and the swearing-in, in March, of Franklin D. Roosevelt as president in the midst of economic disaster. The disaster had by then spread to the previously invulnerable movie industry, which was beset by bankruptcies and operating mostly in the red.

Yet though signposts of unease—a sense of slippery collapse and the apprehension of worse to come—are all over the place in these movies, what emerges more forcefully is a raucous counterforce of defiant assertion, if only of the right to have fun and make a little noise. Often the life on screen seems like a hyper-energetic paradise of flagrancy. Whatever else American films of that moment may have been, they were overt, keyed-up, ready to start on a dime when the stage manager barked: “All right, girls, snap into it.”

There was a discernible kick just in letting the eye run down the titles on the program—Broadway Thru a Keyhole, Footlight Parade, Roman Scandals, Wild Boys of the Road, Island of Lost Souls, Mystery of the Wax Museum, The Sin of Nora Moran, Laughter in Hell—especially after coming to appreciate how hard they work to fulfill their sensational promises. Whether the promise is to realize the ultimate fantasy of a chorus line of desirable chorus girls shuffling off to Buffalo in 42nd Street or to wallow in the seductive temptations and exotic cruelties of a thoroughly imaginary Orient in The Bitter Tea of General Yen or to plot a harsh vicarious journey into the heart of the economic crisis itself in Heroes for Sale, it is done with no holding back.

Even the most silken nuance—and there is plenty of that, a good deal of it pilfered from the luminous textures of Josef von Sternberg—is laid down hard. The newly emerged stars of the early 1930s—James Cagney, Jean Harlow, Clark Gable, Bette Davis, Mae West, the Marx Brothers—were in different ways emblems of a frankness that had no time to waste. (RKO’s King Kong, tearing the city apart the way the audience might have felt like doing, could be added to the list.) “You don’t say so,” says Harlow when Gable tries out a tired line on her in Hold Your Man, “aren’t you the bright little thing.” It’s a love scene for a moment when hardboiled sarcasm is the language of dalliance.

The 1933 program was only the most recent of a series of retrospectives in which Film Forum’s repertory programmer Bruce Goldstein has refined our sense of the achievements of the era in which the moral restrictions of the Production Code, although on the books, were not yet being rigorously enforced.1 Goldstein has helped to establish something like a canon, juxtaposing landmarks like Dinner at Eight, 42nd Street, and Duck Soup with other, more obscure films to illuminating effect, restoring in the process a sense of just how jarring even the most familiar items can be. This time around he has enriched the mix by adding not just cartoons, newsreels, trailers, and variety shorts—not to mention a staged reading of the screenplay of the bawdy comedy Convention City, now believed lost—but a small selection, for pointed contrast, of the most original work being done outside America, in France (Jean Vigo’s Zero for Conduct), Japan (Ozu’s Passing Fancy), Austria (Max Ophuls’s Liebelei), and Germany (Fritz Lang’s M, made the year before but released with considerable impact in America in 1933). This was a year in which, for just a little longer before the links started shutting down, the rest of the world was still getting a large part of its entertainment from American movies. Vigo and Ozu were not working in isolation but in response to what Hollywood offered.

This is film programming at such a level of precision and historical seriousness that it is hard to fault except by asking for more. Roy Del Ruth’s The Mind Reader—with Warren William playing a corrupt yet charming carny mentalist with an ambivalence that can only be called mesmerizing—would have filled out the roster of films included here that were scripted by (or at least attributed to) the legendary con man Wilson Mizner in the year of his death: Hard to Handle, The Little Giant, and Heroes for Sale. It is fitting that the name of a self-acknowledged scam artist of Mizner’s proportions should be attached, whatever his actual contribution may have been, to films that chart so intimately the varieties—from carnival hokum and rigged dance marathons to stock fraud and phony patriotism—of American duplicity high and low. Beyond The Mind Reader I have nothing to ask but: What, no Kay Francis?

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The retrospective was billed as a tribute to Hollywood’s “naughtiest, bawdiest year,” a nod to the looming shadow of the Production Code and to the salty prominence of the year’s biggest star, Mae West, whose She Done Him Wrong and I’m No Angel set records even in supposedly straitlaced communities. The product of 1933 does often, and with a lot of extra help from Jean Harlow, have an aura of good-humored sexiness never to be quite equaled. The more desolate sordidness and nihilistic violence of just a year or two before—the years dominated by the fallen woman pictures (Forbidden, Shopworn, The Strange Love of Molly Louvain), the gangster pictures (The Doorway to Hell, The Public Enemy, Quick Millions), and the sadistic undertones of the horror cycle—begin to give way to something more deliberately upbeat.

In lieu of the succession of suffering streetwalkers and unmarried mothers, there is Miriam Hopkins in Lubitsch’s version of Noël Coward’s Design for Living guiltlessly enjoying a ménage à trois with Gary Cooper and Frederic March. In Female, Ruth Chatterton lives out (until a disappointing last-reel comeuppance) an Art Deco dream of female empowerment as an auto executive who, in the manner of Catherine the Great, summons mid-level managers to her bedroom for a night of ecstasy, followed by exile to the Montreal office if they presume too much on this one-time intimacy. Musicals had come back, following an earlier glut that led to audience fatigue, even if they are tough-minded musicals that unfold against a backdrop of chronic joblessness. The geometric convolutions of Busby Berkeley’s glittering chorus lines are the conventional shorthand for that moment in which the Hoover slump was giving way to the burst of New Deal optimism that crops up in direct tributes to FDR in Gold Diggers of 1933 and Footlight Parade.

As things turned out, the political shift coincided with Hollywood’s agreement, in the face of protests, boycotts, and fears of federal censorship under the new administration, to clean up its act. The New Deal notion of everyone pulling together for the common good had affinities, at least from a public relations point of view, with Hollywood’s new-found image as the beneficent provider of entertainments suitable for the whole family and for every region. The Production Code—agreed to by all the major studios—came down in full strength the following year, but the films of 1933 already register the forces of change at work. One might say that culturally speaking the year came in like Baby Face, Alfred E. Green’s lurid account (released only in censored form) of how an exploited working girl sets about sleeping her way to the top, and went out like Little Women, George Cukor’s finely crafted Alcott adaptation that provided almost a template for the new style of universally acceptable prestige picture.

Movies that hinted at seething social resentments and ineradicable conflicts—unless they took place during, say, the French Revolution—were soon to be mostly phased out. The Film Forum retrospective swarms with visions of upheaval: the militant strikers and anti-Red enforcers of William Wellman’s uncompromisingly dark Heroes for Sale; the reform school inmates rising in violent rebellion in The Mayor of Hell; the morally minded teenagers in Cecil B. DeMille’s This Day and Age resorting to clean-cut vigilantism, including what looks very much like torture, to crack down on local crime. Most bizarrely of all, in Gabriel over the White House, a divinely inspired US president (Walter Huston) gives a Mussolinian spin to the notion of executive power by wiping out gangsterism with firing squads.

It is not that Hollywood had been grinding out deliberately subversive films, not even at Warner Brothers, responsible for the harshest exposés of injustice and neglect. The producers simply took their opportunities where they saw them, one picture at a time, with little regard for philosophical consistency—that would be provided by the prelates and reform-minded sociologists who had begun to analyze the implicit messages of Hollywood films. In the odd sort of culture war that culminated in the Code, social progressives often lined up with the religious crusaders when it came to the movies. The sanctity of free cultural expression was occasionally invoked by Hollywood executives under pressure, but few critics and intellectuals joined in because, for the most part, they didn’t regard Hollywood as a cultural enterprise worth defending.

It was more often seen as an exploitative cultural plague, administered by debauched illiterates who pilfered with vulgar abandon from the real arts of literature and drama. People who cared about the art of film in the early 1930s would more likely be talking about films made in Germany and Russia and France. Hollywood would have entered the discussion as a symbol of the destructive force of capital. There had been great Hollywood movies—Chaplin was a universal culture hero—but that had pretty much ended with the talkies. In 1934 the New York Times critic André Sennwald applauded the Legion of Decency for its role in bringing about “a noticeable diminution in the kind of appalling cheapness and unintelligence which filmgoers deplore without regard to private allegiance of faith or creed.”2

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Sennwald may have been thinking about movies like Baby Face, then a byword for noxious vulgarity, now billed by Film Forum as “the Citizen Kane of Pre-Code.” The version now so popular was not even seen in 1933, having been subjected to heavy cuts and a drastically changed, morally improved ending in which Barbara Stanwyck, after a life of sin, is condemned to live out her days in the hideous mill town where she started out. In its uncensored form it is about as uplifting as Moll Flanders, from the early episode in which Stanwyck’s brutal tavern-keeper father pimps her out to a local politician in return for favors owed to the deleted scene in which, discovered by a guard after hopping a freight train, she exchanges sex for free passage while her friend (played by the wonderful African-American actress Theresa Harris) retires to the back of the car, singing “St. Louis Blues.”

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Everett Collection

Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins, and Gary Cooper in Ernst Lubitsch’s version of Noël Coward’s Design for Living, 1933

Baby Face is blissfully free of any clear social message; it has situations, attitudes, salty comebacks, lascivious fadeouts, and quick nasty glimpses of the real world. The mere fact that Theresa Harris starts out as Stanwyck’s friend, not her servant, already differentiates it from later films. We would also not expect, later on, to find the discursive style of the elderly German shoemaker who is Stanwyck’s intellectual mentor, advising her on the art of using sex to dominate men: “You must be a master, not a slave…. Nietzsche says: all life, no matter how we idealize it, is nothing more than exploitation.” Perhaps indeed that is Baby Face’s message, a message that might have been directed subliminally to studio head Jack Warner or producer Darryl F. Zanuck by a disgruntled writer; or perhaps it is just another of the vital elements that float freely through the film, and that refuse to be brought into line.

Thomas Doherty, the preeminent historian of this period, has characterized pre-Code movies as “anomalous…wildly eccentric…just plain bizarre…the moral terrain is so off-kilter they seem imported from a parallel universe.”3 But this is chiefly the case if you take the following thirty years of Code-enforced movie morality and story logic as the norm. It was the post-1933 movies that can truly be said to have created a parallel universe, a model village where you could marvel at how lifelike it all was without even noticing how artfully huge areas of reality had been walled off.

The unstable contradictoriness that is the very life of pre-Code films is nowhere better displayed than in Roy Del Ruth’s Employees’ Entrance, one of those Grand Hotel spinoffs so popular in the 1930s in which a large institution—here Franklin Monroe & Co., a Macy’s-like department store—is made the stage for intersecting human dramas. The dominant figure is Kurt Anderson, the store’s manager, played by Warren William, the era’s go-to guy for playing amoral, lecherous go-getters.

In the course of the film’s busily plotted seventy-five minutes he bankrupts one outside vendor, drives an executive to suicide, arranges for a floozy on his payroll (Alice White) to seduce a board member, and himself seduces his employee Loretta Young—twice—before driving her to near-suicide by revealing their intimacy to her husband. (Young, dazed with drink: “You look familiar.” William: “I’d like to be.”) William’s dialogue is vintage 1933. “I didn’t recognize you with all your clothes on,” he tells White when she enters his office, and on being told of the fired executive’s suicide responds: “When a man outlives his usefulness he ought to jump out a window.” (Later, when he expresses surprise that White still has some moral principles, she replies: “I saved a few out of the crash.”)

In its early stage the movie seems a comic-horrific exposé of capitalism, with the exploitative, tyrannical, misogynistic manager its ultimate monster. Monroe & Co., where workers are underpaid, relentlessly driven, and routinely spied on and sexually harassed, would seem to be anyone’s nightmare of the place where they don’t want to work. But a job is a job, and William turns out to be the film’s twisted hero, the man who by sheer ruthless discipline—“Too much sleep makes a man brain-dull”—is going to save the company from predatory bankers and feckless elitist board members. He’s a loner, an outlaw, and the only man capable of taking charge of a foundering economic situation.

You wait for the moment when he reveals that he really has a heart, except that it turns out he doesn’t. The mad machine of business goes on with obsessed and loveless Warren William at the helm, while the nice couple of whom he has taken such cruel advantage—Loretta Young and Wallace Ford—cut their losses and leave the scene of the fray, off presumably to live in a more civilized milieu, if such a milieu exists and if there is any way to make a living there in 1933.

With its stepped-up pacing, its stock company of character actors, its stream of jokes, insults, and double-takes, Employees’ Entrance can be seen as an assembly-line product, but it is anything but mindlessly mechanical. The effect is not deadening but enlivening, in large part because we can’t anticipate its most affecting moments: a drunken Loretta Young popping balloons with her cigarette, or Warren William seeming to subside into his own inner darkness as he moodily denounces the avariciousness of women, or any of those scenes when one of the minor characters, given her second or two of screen time, suddenly asserts the importance of her role, her life. It is not a protest film, but as a uniquely savage cartoon of office life, it might as well be.

Employees’ Entrance might be described as a typical 1933 movie, but what is striking is how many of the year’s films were truly anomalous. The Marx Brothers would never again go as far toward creating a world to the measure of their own free association as in Duck Soup, and there would be no more vehicles for Mae West like I’m No Angel, in which she creates the impression of ruling over a domain molded entirely by her own desires. Realms of fantasy (the strange lyrical experiment Zoo in Budapest) and nightmare (the unnerving, expressionistic H.G. Wells adaptation Island of Lost Souls) coexist with visions of another America of soup kitchens and hobo jungles (Man’s Castle, Heroes for Sale, Wild Boys of the Road). At every turn you see something, whether it’s Paul Robeson dominating the screen in The Emperor Jones or Greta Garbo keeping the camera fixed on her stare longer than seems possible at the end of Queen Christina, that seems to hint: this will not happen again. The astonishing variety of the films of 1933 suggests a laboratory where all the possibilities are being tried out just before the range of choices gets much narrower.