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Monday, May 19, 2008

FOUR FRIGHTENED PEOPLE (1934)

Mousy Claudette Colbert, henpecked Herbert Marshall, eccentric Society type Mary Boland & braggart reporter William Gargan escape a bubonic plagued ship only to find themselves lost on a tropical island in this demented Cecil B. De Mille pic from the very end of the Pre-Code era. Mostly played for laughs and often quite funny when the supreme genius of the great Mary Boland takes wing (especially once natives abduct her and she organizes the children & wives with birth control pep talks to subjugate the savage hubbies), but things curdle romantically as Colbert grows hilariously glamorous and plays out a variation of THE ADMIRABLE CRICHTON, which De Mille made back in 1919 as MALE AND FEMALE.

1 comment:

Frank said...

Fun, but surprisingly unremarkable given the plot possibilities and personnel involved. Per the title slides exteriors were shot on location in Hawaii by genius cinematographer Karl Struss (Sunrise et al) but given the typical dense jungle scenes mostly look like they could have been on a well-appointed soundstage. The four castaways are constantly under threat but none of the native or jungle creature attacks seem too terrifying and are resolved fairly easily. As noted, Boland is a highlight (and her interactions with the natives fairly non-racist for the time) while Colbert becomes more alluring as the film progresses (a la Sigourney Weaver in Galaxy Quest) and even has a bona fide nude scene (maybe?). But given the short running time, and the fact that the leads were not quite top marquee names yet (Colbert's next film was It Happened One Night), this almost seems like a high-end B picture despite DeMille's name above the title.