In The Golden Age Of Screw-Ball
Comedies-Carole Lombard’s Nothing Sacred
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Nothing Sacred, starring Carole
Lombard, Fredric March, directed by William Wellman, 1937
No question the laugh-hungry 1930s
Great Depression audiences were entertained by films which represented the
golden age of classic screw-ball comedies from the likes of directors Preston
Sturgis, Frank Capra and William Wellman the director of the film under review Nothing Sacred, done in early Technicolor
(the first such screwball comedy). No question as well that the subject of the
media and its foibles, excesses and dishonesties, then and now, are a fit
subject for screwball comedy in any age (although one has to go some to be Cary
Grant’s The Front Page from that same
period). And no question no screw-ball comedy is worth a damn if there isn’t a
little romance thrown in to insure a happy ending for those laugh-hungry Great
Depression audiences. That my friends is the trifecta.
Here’s the scoop. Wally Cook (played
here rather stiffly by Fredric March who usually played characters with a
certain gravitas) a from hunger no-hold-barred field reporter for any newspaper
USA in any town USA (although the actual setting in the film is New York City)
got burned, got burned badly trying to stage a society charity hoax to run a
story to the ground and make a name for himself in the big city. As a result he
was relegated to the obits, literally the kiss-of-death for any hot-shot
reporter on the make. By hook or by crook he inveigled the big boss to let him
run with a story about a woman in Vermont, Hazel Flagg, (played by Carol
Lombard also somewhat stiffly since she was known as a comedy star of sorts)
who was allegedly dying of incurable radium poisoning (yeah this is before the
atom bomb and all that). Wally swears he will have them (those city fervent
newspaper readers) crying for more once he sets the story up, and jump the
newspaper’s circulation up to boot. The boss buys into that proposition and
Wally is on his way to the sticks.
Things as they always do in
screw-ball comedies, get tricky, get complicated once he gets to Podunk though.
See Hazel has been misdiagnosed by her, well, stew-ball doctor and she is not
dying. Thus she will miss that trip to New York City with all the trimming that
she had dreamed about as a farewell to this world (NYC then, and now too
although perhaps less so, a Mecca for those who have not been there before,
especially small-town types). No problem though as Hazel decided to play “sick”
and take Wally up on that trip offer. And off they go.
Well New York City and its’
attentions to her are everything she expected, and more. But then things got
sticky again. She fell for Wally, fell hard and didn’t know how to tell him she
was not going to die. He has fallen for her too so that got things all mixed up
until she hit on the “bright” idea of committing suicide, of fading from view before
every New Yorker who could read found out she was a hoax. Eventually Wally found
out about her real state, found out he has no problem with her “suicide” solution
and they go off into the sunset to marital bliss. Sure the plot line had been
done before, and since, but here it is all wrapped up in bows for you, wrapped
up in good feelings if you were in that Great Depression audience needing a little
escape from your own woes.
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