SADIE MCKEE (MGM 1934) Warner Home Video
Clarence Brown’s Sadie McKee (1934) is a
maudlin, highly predictable and totally improbable mélange of clichés and
caricatures, extolling the virtues and vices of America's classicist society.
The film’s one saving grace is Joan Crawford, cast as the title character – a
lowly maid, aspiring to be so much more. Alas, Crawford’s performance proves to
be everything; a variation on her ‘shop girl makes good’ formula that was
the first half of her tenure at MGM. Fascinating to consider the 4 stages of Crawford’s
career; Sadie McKee, obviously from that first go-around as the romantic
love interest who wins bittersweet victories, conquering narrow minds and financial
hardships by clawing her way to the top of the heap with more guts than glory.
The stages that followed would see Crawford morph into a long-suffering
romantic martyr, then again, into a tough-as nails female terminator in
shoulder pads, and finally, as the moody and malevolent aged screen queen in
those awful hags-ploitation flicks that did much to negatively color her earlier reputation as a great movie actress and star. Personally, I
prefer Crawford’s martyr phase at Warner Bros. to her glamour years at MGM. Somehow,
she just seems better-suited to this work than what Metro was offering in its stead.
The screenplay for Sadie McKee is by John Meehan and is of the ‘elegant
tripe’ ilk.
Sadie’s mother (Helen Ware) encourages a love match
between her daughter and Michael Alderson (Franchot Tone); the young buck of
the household Sadie serves. The two share an unrequited affection, but Sadie’s
heart is drawn to arrogant man about town, Tommy Wallace (Gene Raymond)
instead. Tommy is a factory worker and thus, more on par with Sadie at least
insofar as their social status goes. When Tommy is fired from his job for
dishonesty, he runs off to New York with Sadie in tow – the two in search of
high adventure. Misguidedly believing that Tommy will eventually marry her,
Sadie’s heart is broken when Tommy takes up with girl of easy virtue, Dolly
Merrick (Esther Ralston) instead. Determined to make a life for herself rather
than go sulking home to mama, Sadie embarks upon a career. Her trajectory is
anything but smooth or sure-footed. However, after her share of lumps, Sadie
ends up singing for her supper at a fashionable night club. There, she meets
millionaire Jack Brennan (Edward Arnold); a dark horse lush, more tragic than
romantic and quite possessive of Sadie once his obsession with the bottle takes
hold. After numerous thwarted attempts at dragging her to the altar, Jack
marries Sadie; she out of pity rather than love, creating a downward spiral
into marital chaos. Running true to form for a Crawford flick of this vintage,
a reprieve materializes when Michael reenters Sadie’s life. Sadie realizes that
she has loved Michael from the start and the two go off – presumably into the
sunset of bliss that otherwise would have eluded anyone else who attempted to
chart such an implausible course.
Director Brown, usually a master of this sort of
subterfuge, delivers a particularly stilted offering this time around. The
opening scenes on the Alderson estate ramble aimlessly with too much dialogue
and not enough ‘proof’ that Michael and Sadie are actually in love. Hence,
Michael’s reappearance near the end of the story seems more contrived and
rushed. Despite the fact Crawford and Tone were husband and wife, their on-screen
chemistry is wooden and unconvincing. Still, Crawford makes the most of each
scene, her hard-boiled eyes capturing the pang of longing for a better life,
her pouty lips telling their own tale of misery.
Warner Home Video's DVD is generally weak. Age-related
artifacts are present throughout and, at times, quite distracting. True, the
film elements are almost 80 years old, but that’s only more reason for Sadie
McKee to have received a much-needed digital restoration. Fine details
disappear during darker scenes. The audio is Dolby Digital 1.0 mono but
presented at an adequate listening level. Extras include short subjects and a
theatrical trailer. This disc is exclusively available only as part of Joan
Crawford Vol. 2.
FILM RATING (out of 5 - 5 being the best)
2
VIDEO/AUDIO
2.5
EXTRAS
1
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