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Judge, 1933-03 · page 26 of 40

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Judge — March 1933 — page 26: Judge, 1933-03

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JIEWING it fre or producer’: n a professional, angle, the gentle- men of the press allowed “State Fair” to get in and out of town with- out undue excitement. Viewed in such a manner you can say, as they did in practically so many words: “State ir is a bucolic romance with Janet Gaynor, Lew Ayres and Will Rogers in it. Miss Gaynor has a new love partner, Mr. Ayres, who is quite good, and Mr. Rogers does not make any columnist er. about the state of the nation, is better than usual. The picture shows us a family at the state fair, who nd during the week the mother wins a prize for mince meat, the father wins first pri with the champion hog, Blue Boy, and the son and daughter have their first real love affairs. The boy falls in lc with a trapeze artist, the girl with a newspaper reporter. It is a mild little comedy, well-produced, etc. etc.” All of which is more or less tr but it is neither good commerci criticism nor good reporting. Com- mercially, “State Fair’ will un- doubtedly be more than a mild little comedy production. It probably will make more money than any picture produced by the newly organized Fox Film company in the past three y and for very spec reasons, It 3 Janet Gaynor and Will Rogers in it, and although they are over-rated as box office attractions, they will bring in some custome On the other hand, “State Fair” is not a “Gaynor” or a “Rogers” production, con- sequently those people who wander in to see it for want of something se to do will remember it is a ming, well-written, accurate show of modern farm people. And this is news. Anything new in motion picture production is news, and “State Fair” is the only movie produced in my time in which farmers are represented as some- thing besides booted, mustachioed, and penniless yokels; in which we find college graduates living in com- fortable homes, raising thorough- bred cattle, enjoying big » excel- lent food, and good health. They sxrow farmers like that in lowa, for all the mortgage riots, and Phil Stony wrote a very able book about them. al By PARE LORE That the book was bo: news, the buying best- ey hired Paul Green, Carolina playwr . te director Henry King unde very r and surrounded it with good musical and scenic effects is, put altogether, real news. 4 love s —parti- cularly the one in bed—between the farm boy and the trapeze artist are very fine indeed. important to would nt Wits not because hav vies way of ers, the Miss Gaynor is not she the the cour: picture, or e ruined show. Mr. Rogers is a good com- edian; forced to play a charac part, he is very amusing. With less expensive and less ex pert care “State Fair’ would inde have been just an amusing little production. However, Henry King took a story that has a good, as well as a new, background—the hob sta- dium, the professors from Ames, the comic Congressman—and then went to work quick nd built suspen: his simple story by having mus dialogue create the great importance of the fair to his characte A farm picture, per se, would not be import- ant. But a good movie idea, ably handled, and as it uses also genu- ine Americana seldom dramatized in any form, “State Fair” becomes one of the few important productions of the year. And in case this academic discussion of it $ wearied you, | might add that it is yood-humored and even funny a great part of the time, “Tf you're a Technocrat, Mr. Boggs, you should be able to fix the lights.” 3 Mr. K went to theatre in N sist of Mr. Ne managed confine man took time out and Ingland, the w York seems to con 1 Coward, and I have only after struggle to 1 discussion of Mr. Coward's theatre which doesn't really belong in this department—to a considera- tion of the picture, “Cavalcade.” It would be just as unfair to con sider those merits on the basis of Mr. Coward's deficiencies as it to call the pic current was e the greatest movi ever made, and credit M Coward with the dubious achievement. The play, “Cavalcade,” like “Grand Hotel,” really was a_ theatrical novelty with movie effects to make it an unusual, if unimportant, stage production. The movie has the authenticity of a sequently becomes a convincing mo- tion picture. With splendid treat- ment, it is moving and exciting at times as well as authentic, but it has thin moments. The characters are bounced over the head with ~Englanc tribulations like Punch and Judy and seldom would be real if they depended upon the manu- script—and not wsreel, and con- some ve the atmospheric music and scenery of the movie—for support. The scenes of the last war are stupidly and patently manufactured and the concluding scenes are cheap and confused. In fact, after the dramatic sketch portraying the sink- ing of the Titanic, the story and the charavtters emerge from the exciting picture effects and begin to look like an old-fashioned entr’acte, during which the leading tenor used to ap- in a green light and, ying and Flowers,” assu the audience he woudn’t have fallen so low if he had listened to his old mother. In other words, the adroit hand that wrote “Dance, dance, dance, little lady” shows only too plainly. As a motion picture, the non-com- mercial “Cry of the World” would have been equally as good at half the production cost, and, sans the magic effect of the name Coward, “State Fair” is nevertheless a more genuine, logical, and important production. comicbooks.com