San Francisco (1936)
Facts
| Directed by | W.S. Van Dyke, Hugh Harman and Susan F. Walker |
| Cast | Clark Gable, Jeanette MacDonald, Spencer Tracy, Jack Holt, Jessie Ralph, Ted Healy, Warren Hymer, Edgar Kennedy, Bert Roach, Shirley Ross, Al Shean and Russell Simpson |
| Theatrical Release | June 26, 1936 |
| DVD Release | June 20, 2006 |
| Running Time | 115 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 012569528826 |
| Buy this item | $17.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 24 4:47 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Warner Brothers, Usually ships in 24 hours, Black & White, Closed-captioned, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 39 new from $12.17, 15 used from $12.17 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| beauty(MacDonald) and the beast(Gable) |
With her striking operatic voice, newly arrived Mary clearly is miscast in Blackie's seedy nightclub. But, he selfishly tries to block her move to an opera house when she soon gets a chance. She brings a bit of class to his club and hopefully to himself. Although she is somewhat attracted to Blackie's animal magnetism, she clearly has led the life of a nun, and rebuffs his attempts to seduce her. His megalomania and scoffing at all things religious repel this daughter of a country parson. Nor does she appear to have strong romantic feelings for Jack Burley, the Knob Hill owner of the opera house, whose mother tries to convince her to marry him. The only man Mary really seems comfortable with is priest Father Mullin(Spencer Tracy), who fills her in on Blackie's life history, having been a part of most of it, and functions as her guardian and advisor in dealing with Blackie. He points out that he and Blackie came from the same school of hard knocks and that he might well have become another Blackie. His boxing match with Blackie serves as a visual reinforcer of this claim.
Mary's eventual reconciliation with Blackie in the aftermath of the earthquake and fire doesn't come across as believable. Obviously, she is a very proud and pious woman. Blackie's face punch of Father Mullin that caused her again to abandon the Paradise and Blackie, and Blackie's vengeful humiliation of her in publicly smashing the trophy she had just won in a competition simply should not allow for the sort of romantic reconciliation at the end of the film. Their unlikely reconciliation functions as the symbolic culmination of the morality play aspect of the film.
As a morality play, this is basically a modern take on the Sodom and Gomorrah biblical story, in which these rich but sinful cities are said to have been destroyed by God, via fire and brimstone. Modern research suggests that an earthquake and subsequent fire is a plausible natural explanation for their destruction. Just why they were considered sinful by Jews and by God is still a matter of some debate. Sometimes, simply being wealthy is looked upon as sinful. Being rich and arrogant and unconcerned about the poor and sick is usually considered a greater sin.
This was especially relevant to the mid-Depression audiences of the day.
We get the impression that the Knob Hill elite, like those of Sodom and Gomorrah, tended to have this characteristic. To some extent, Blackie was also like this, as he liked to consider himself a displaced member of
the Knob hill elite. But Blackie's economic interests also personify the seemy side of San Francisco, which are also attributed to Sodom and Gomorrah in the bible. Blackie also personifies the blasphamy of much of this society. Thus, the earthquake conveniently destroys most of the sinful world of the Barbary Coast. But it also kills elitist Jack Burley. As well, his family home on Knob Hill is dynamited to hopefully reduce the spread of the fire. Symbolically, this is saying that both the elitist world of Knob Hill and the seemy world of the Barbary Coast deserved destruction by God.
Mary and Father Mullin, presumably protected by God, emerged from the disaster unscathed. Blackie survived with a nasty head wound, giving him a chance at redemption. The final scene shows a rebuilt San Francisco, presumably much less sinful than the destroyed city(Probably an unduly optimistic sudden transformation of human nature).
The DVD is of excellent quality, and includes several special features. Of the latter, the excellent biography and filmography of Gable
no doubt will be of greatest interest.
May 7, 2008
| Present for Mom |
| Need To Be A Big Fan |
| well played |
February 12, 2008
| San Francisco - A Great Movie |
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