Wednesday, September 25, 2024

2024 Blind Spot Series: The Roaring Twenties

 

Based on the short story The World Moves On by Mark Hellinger, The Roaring Twenties is the story of three army friends whose lives would intersect following the end of World War I as they would experience the events of the 1920s through their different lives as well as getting into the world of crime. Directed by Raoul Walsh and screenplay by Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay, and Robert Rossen, the film is a look into the lives of three men who would all find a degree of success and failure during the days of Prohibition. Starring James Cagney, Priscilla Lane, Humphrey Bogart, Gladys George, Jeffrey Lynn, Frank McHugh, and Paul Kelly. The Roaring Twenties is a dazzling and riveting film by Raoul Walsh.

The film revolves around three men who fought in World War I as they would deal with its aftermath as well as being part of the world of bootlegging and crime through different means during the era of Prohibition. It is a film is an exploration into the three different journeys of three men who would find some success during the era of Prohibition only for one of them to fall spectacularly towards its end and aftermath. The film’s screenplay is straightforward though it features narration by John Deering who talks about the events that these characters would endure with its focus on the film’s protagonist in Eddie Bartlett (James Cagney). Bartlett was a soldier for the Army in World War I as he found himself in a foxhole with another soldier in George Hally (Humphrey Bogart) and later a younger soldier in Lloyd Hart (Jeffrey Lynn) as they would survive the war but Bartlett stayed behind in Europe for more than a year as he returned home without a job or any prospects except for being a cab driver thanks to the help of a friend in Danny Green (Frank McHugh).

During one of his cab trips, he is asked to deliver some liquor to a club owner in Panama Smith (Gladys George) where he gets into trouble despite Lloyd’s help to get him release yet Smith realizes Bartlett’s worth as they collaborate with each other in running their own bootlegging operation. With Lloyd serving as an attorney for Bartlett, Bartlett also reconnects with a young woman in Jean Sherman (Priscilla Lane) whom he had corresponded with during the war as he got her a job as a singer for Smith’s speakeasy club. Bartlett hopes to be with Jean although she is more interested in Lloyd as a conflict with another bootlegger in Nick Brown (Paul Kelly) has Bartlett and his crew stealing a shipment where he reunites with Hally who works with Bartlett to anger Brown. However, the conflict between Bartlett and Brown starts to boil over where Hally starts to take charge against Bartlett’s wishes leading to trouble with Lloyd wanting out of the business. The script is filled with some unique dialogue that plays into the period of the times as well as the drama and some of the dark moments in the film with some dark humor involved as well.

Raoul Walsh’s direction has elements of style yet much of his direction is grounded in a world that was decadent and violent as it plays into a time where everyone doing illegal things was the norm until the end of Prohibition. Shot on location on the studio lots at Warner Brothers in Hollywood, California, Walsh maintains this atmosphere of a world where war veterans find themselves disconnected with life at home as Bartlett is unable to get back his old job as a mechanic. Walsh’s direction does have some wide shots of the locations as well as the space of a room or a club while much of his direction is based on the usage of close-ups and medium shots in the way characters interact with one another. Even in the way Walsh catches a reaction such as Bartlett’s first meeting with Jean only to learn she is underage as well as the scenes in the nightclub years later when Jean meets Lloyd for the first time. The way Walsh create these simple shots display the sense of emotion and euphoria that happens as well as the way he presents some foreshadowing such as an early scene of Bartlett, Hally, and Lloyd hearing the news of the armistice as it reflects on the direction they would take in their lives.

Walsh also plays into this growing powerplay between Bartlett and Hally with the latter feeling like he has become a lackey for the former as he would do what he can to rise and take over. Even as Bartlett starts to cope with the decisions, he has made that would alienate both Jean and Lloyd, the film’s third act plays into the stock market crash of 1929 where Bartlett’s fortunes dwindle to the point that he makes a deal with Hally that would end up being bad for him. It also plays into this period of post-Prohibition where the aftermath of Bartlett’s fall forces him to see reality as well as realize what he must do to make things right. Especially towards those who really did care about him where Walsh creates an exhilarating sequence that plays into a man that is trying to find some redemption as well as break a pact that they made during the war. Overall, Walsh crafts a compelling and chilling film about the rise and fall of a bootlegger and the people he meet during his journey.

Cinematographer Ernie Haller does brilliant work with the film’s black and white cinematography as it plays into the dark atmosphere of nighttime exterior scenes to the more vibrant look of the daytime interior/exterior scenes as well as some of the club scenes. Editor Jack Killifer does excellent work with the editing as it has some style in its usage of transition wipes as well as some straight cuts to play into the suspense and action. Art director Max Parker does amazing work with the look of the sets such as the interiors of the clubs as well as a factory that stored some liquor during a heist. Wardrobe designer Milo Anderson does fantastic work with the look of the suits as well as the dresses and gowns the women wear.

The special effects work of Edwin du Par and Byron Haskin do terrific work with some of the film’s minimal photographic effects to play into some of the montages. The sound work of Everett Alton Brown is superb for its sound work in the way tommy guns sound as well as the atmosphere of a location and other sparse sounds. The film’s music by Ray Heindorf and Heinz Roemheld is wonderful for its orchestral score mixed in with elements of the jazz music of the time as well as songs that were part of that period that features musical direction by Leo F. Forbstein in selecting some of the traditional songs that were performed during those times.

The casting by Steve Triller is marvelous as it feature some notable small roles from Vera Lewis as Bartlett’s old landlord, Elliott Sullivan as a cellmate of Bartlett following his first arrest for liquor distribution, Joseph Crehan as Bartlett’s old boss, Abner Biberman as Hally’s right-hand man Lefty, Joseph Sawyer as a former army sergeant that Hally hates, and Elisabeth Risdon as Jean’s mother whom Bartlett and Danny meet early in the film. Paul Kelly is superb as a rival bootlegger in Nick Brown whom Hally was working for until he reunited with Bartlett as he is someone that does not like Bartlett’s methods prompting him to wage war on Bartlett. Gladys George is fantastic as Panama Smith as a club owner who teams up with Bartlett to create an empire of their own while she becomes concerned about his decisions as well as harboring her own feelings for him. Frank McHugh is terrific as Bartlett’s friend/roommate Danny Green who helps find Bartlett a job as well as help him distribute liquor though he becomes concerned for some of the things they are doing in the film’s second act.

Jeffrey Lynn is excellent as Lloyd Hart as a young army soldier that Bartlett and Hally meet in a foxhole as he is also a law student that eventually becomes Bartlett’s lawyer until things become out of control. Priscilla Lane is amazing as Jean Sherman as a young woman that Bartlett was corresponding with during the war as he would later meet her again while distributing liquor at a show where he hopes to win her over except that she finds herself falling for Hart while also caring for Bartlett. Humphrey Bogart is phenomenal as George Lally as a soldier that Bartlett meets as he is also a bootlegger that also has ambitions yet feels like he is being slighted when he can do so much more to the point that he would do things to usurp Bartlett. Finally, there’s James Cagney in a tremendous performance as Eddie Bartlett as a soldier who returns home from the war only to become unemployed as he finds money through delivering liquor and bootlegging where he becomes ambitious but also starts to question everything once things fall apart as it is a performance full of charm and wit as well as a vulnerability in how he deals with his losses and regrets.

The Roaring Twenties is a spectacular film by Raoul Walsh that features a great leading performance from James Cagney as well as an incredible supporting performance from Humphrey Bogart. Along with its ensemble cast, dazzling look, energetic tone, and story of ambition and chaos during the days of Prohibition. It is a film that manages to be much more than a gangster and crime film as it is a study of a period in which everything was wild until things got darker with those trying to pick up the pieces. In the end, The Roaring Twenties is a sensational film by Raoul Walsh.

© thevoid99 2024

4 comments:

SJHoneywell said...

I watched this earlier this year, and I enjoyed it. It will never top something like The Public Enemy or Little Caesar (or even the original Scarface), but it's fun to watch and has a dynamite cast.

I love watching Bogart play a bad guy.

Brittani Burnham said...

This sounds interesting!

thevoid99 said...

I had fun watching this as it's the first time I have seen a film starring James Cagney in full and I want to do more.

thevoid99 said...

Indeed it is. It's one of these films that are the reason why gangster films exists. Plus, we all need to see more films starring James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart. Tony Montana loved those guys.