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Whirlpool

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Whirlpool (1934)

April. 10,1934
|
6.6
|
NR
| Drama Crime Romance
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An ex-convict tries to connect with the daughter who doesn't even know he exists.

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Titreenp
1934/04/10

SERIOUSLY. This is what the crap Hollywood still puts out?

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Keeley Coleman
1934/04/11

The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;

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Hattie
1934/04/12

I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.

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Guillelmina
1934/04/13

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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GUENOT PHILIPPE
1934/04/14

A Roy William Neill's movie, with the exception of Sherlock Holmes series, are hard to find, especially the silent ones, mostly lost, unfortunately. This Columbia Pictures film is rare too. But the scheme is very familiar to me, where a father meets his lost daughter twenty years later, after he was separated from her mother, after he was in jail. This scheme has been seen a couple of times before, all in thirties features. I don't remember the titles. And we did not see such topics anymore a decade later. This scheme seemed to be made only in the thirties. A melodrama mixed up a little with some noir accents.An interesting gem.

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dlto 622
1934/04/15

Jack Holt is OK in this film but Jean Arthur saves it. The plot is unbelievable, but is noteworthy since it was Arthur's first film for Columbia after her return to Hollywood from the New York stage. Her previous films at Universal were forgettable. According to her biography, it was when executives saw the daily rushes, that they offered her a long term contract.This movie is also notable in that Frank Capra reviewed her scenes and decided to offer her the part as Babe Bennett in the now classic Mr. Deeds Goes To Town. You can understand why he picked her. It was the beginning of a successful film period, which lasted 20 more years.It is also interesting and funny to see Allen Jenkins, in a typical side kick role, particularly when he is doing knee bends in front of a window in his underwear.

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jkholman
1934/04/16

I only caught the last third of this film the other morning, but it was enough to show me what a wonderful job Jack Holt does as a little girl's father. Because even at twenty-one, she is still his little girl. It makes everything that follows worth it. I have two (eleven and five), and the end of the film breaks my heart. Some other films that feature moments of paternal love include: China Doll (Victor Mature); Desperate Hours (Fredrick March); Kramer vs. Kramer (Dustin Hoffman); The Taking of Peggy Ann (look for David Soul on this one); The Green Berets (Jim Hutton); True Grit (the other Duke saying goodbye to Mattie Ross); It's a Wonderful Life (George Bailey with Zsu Zsu's petals); Man on Fire (Denzel Washington parleying for the life of his ward); Twilight Zone - Episode: Little Girl Lost; Way to go, Duke.JKHolman

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boblipton
1934/04/17

Jack Holt is great in this rather ornately written melodrama. He plays a man sentenced to prison for twenty years, whose pregnant wife refuses to divorce him. He sends her a letter that he has committed suicide in a way that leaves no corpse. We then fast forward twenty-five years. Jack is now a reclusive night-club owner and his daughter is Jean Arthur, a newspaperwoman who figures out who he is. In order to protect her mother, who has remarried, from public scandal, Holt has to disappear again.The rest of the movie is about the complications surrounding the latter events and Jack Holt gives a better performance than I have ever seen him give, enormously underplayed by his usual standards. Jean Arthur has to contend with some lines that have not aged well, as does juvenile Donald Cook.Nonetheless, throughout all this, the performances as as good as they can get under old hand Roy William Neill. Like many silent directors, Neill had retreated to the Bs -- although this is definitely an A picture from Columbia. Even so, Neill always worked well and carefully and this is a fine effort, the visuals perfect under a crack team of three cinematographers and half a dozen camera operators that included Joe August and Ben Kline.In short, while the dialogue may occasionally make you roll your eyes, everything else about this movie will keep you intensely interested.

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