Bordertown (1935 film)
Bordertown | |
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Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. | |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $369,000[1] |
Box office | $1,237,000[1] |
Bordertown is a 1935 American
Plot
After graduating from Pacific Night Law School in Los Angeles, feisty and ambitious
Charlie's lonely, unhappily married wife Marie makes a play for Johnny, who resists her advances. Certain Johnny has shunned her simply because she is married, she locks her inebriated husband in the garage and leaves the car running, asphyxiating him.
Dale Elwell and her society friends, including Brook Manville, visit the club and Johnny becomes infatuated with her. A jealous Marie accuses Johnny of murdering Charlie, but when called to testify at his trial, she collapses on the witness stand, having become insane. Johnny returns to Los Angeles and proposes to Dale, who contemptuously rejects him, citing the dramatic differences in their ethnic and economic backgrounds, then is hit and killed by a car trying to get away from him. Johnny decides to sell the Silver Slipper, donate the proceeds to a law school, and settle in Los Angeles among his own people.
Cast
- Paul Muni as Johnny Ramirez
- Bette Davis as Marie Roark
- Margaret Lindsay as Dale Elwell
- Eugene Pallette as Charlie Roark
- Robert Barrat as Padre
- Soledad Jimenez as Mrs. Ramirez
- Hobart Cavanaugh as Harry
- Gavin Gordon as Brook Manville
- William Davidson as Dr. Carte
- Oscar Apfel as Judge Rufus Barnswell (uncredited)
- Wade Boteler as Buying Casino Man (uncredited)
- Chris-Pin Martin as José (uncredited)
- George Regas as Guillermo (uncredited)
- Arthur Treacher as Roberts (uncredited)
Production
Bordertown was one of the first films to come under the close scrutiny of the Hays Office, which finally was enforcing the
Leading man
After murdering her husband, Marie undergoes a gradual mental deterioration, culminating in a collapse in the courtroom. Director Archie Mayo expected Davis to deliver a histrionic performance, but the actress, whose own sister suffered from a mental disorder, insisted a subtle portrayal of the breakdown w as more appropriate and accurate.[3][4] "When I firmly and sincerely believed I should play my role a certain way, I wasn't afraid to argue about it with my director", Davis remembered. "They wanted me to be a raving lunatic in the courtroom scene, pull my hair, and scream. That is the only way insanity had been played on the screen up to that time." After the film was completed, studio executives felt viewers would fail to realize Marie was insane and insisted Davis re-shoot the scene. She agreed she would do so only if preview audiences did not realize the character had descended into madness. "I was never asked to do a retake", Davis recalled.
Critical reception
Andre Sennwald of The New York Times called the film "a raw and biting melodrama dealing with the bitterly realistic emotions" that permits Paul Muni "to scrape the nerves in the kind of taut and snarling role at which he is so consummately satisfying" and to display "his great talent for conviction and theatrical honesty." He cited the "fine and uncommonly honest performance" of Bette Davis, who he found to be "effective and touching in pathological mazes which the cinema rarely dares to examine." While he thought Johnny's "feeble confessional at the conclusion of Bordertown is an unconvincing and inconsistent denouement for the career of such a vigorous rebel against the established order", he felt the film "otherwise manages to impale the spectator's attention before the picturesque and somewhat hysterical materials of the story."[5]
Box Office
According to Warner Bros records the film earned $891,000 domestically and $346,000 foreign.[1]
References
- ^ a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 16 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
- ^ a b Bordertown at Turner Classic Movies
- ^ ISBN 0-8015-5184-6, pp. 55-57
- ISBN 0-02-551500-4, p. 69
- ^ The New York Times review
External links
- Bordertown at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Bordertown at IMDb
- Bordertown at the TCM Movie Database