Poverty Row

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Poverty Row is a slang term used to refer to

studios. Although many of them were based on (or near) today's Gower Street
in Hollywood, the term did not necessarily refer to any specific physical location, but was rather a figurative catch-all for low-budget films produced by these lower-tier studios.

Many of the films of Poverty Row were Westerns, including series such as Billy the Kid, starring Buster Crabbe, from Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC), comedy/adventure series[2] such as those featuring the Bowery Boys (Monogram Pictures)[3] and detectives such as The Shadow. The films were characterized by low budgets,[4] casts made up of minor stars or unknowns, and overall production values betraying the haste and economy with which they were made.[5]

Studios

While some Poverty Row studios had a brief existence, releasing only a few films,

major film studios such as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Warner Bros., and Paramount Pictures
.

The most successful and longest-lived of such lower-tier companies maintained permanent lots (and many standing sets that dedicated moviegoers could frequently recognize), had both cast and crew under contract, and had a more varied output than smaller firms.

Studios of this type

Lower-tier studios

The smallest studios, including

Hitler, Beast of Berlin[13] to supplement their own limited production capacity. Sometimes the same producers would found a new studio when the old one failed, such as Harry S. Webb
and Bernard B. Ray's Reliable Pictures and Metropolitan Pictures.

Some organizations such as

began by obtaining the rights to re-release older films from other studios before producing their own films.

Comparison with other studios

The Big Five majors
The Little Three majors
Poverty Row (top four of many)
Non-majors

Decline

The breakup of the studio system (and its restrictive chain-theater distribution network, which left independent movie houses eager for seat-filling product from the Poverty Row studios) following 1948's United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. decision, and the advent of television were among the factors that led to the decline and ultimate disappearance of "Poverty Row" as a Hollywood phenomenon.[16]

See also

Further reading

References