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Saturday, February 19, 2011

#197. Grand Hotel (1932)


Directed By: Edmund Goulding

Starring: Greta Garbo, John Barrymore, Joan Crawford




Tag line: "Thank The Stars For A Great Entertainment !"

Trivia:  This was the only Best Picture Oscar winner not to be nominated for any other Academy Awards








There was something magical about the movies of the 1930s, when films told big stories and required even bigger stars to tell them. Classics like Boys Town, Captain Blood, My Man Godfrey, It Happened One Night, The Thin Man, and many others did their part to put Hollywood on the map in these early years, yet no film was quite as elaborate, quite as magnificent as 1932's Grand Hotel

The setting is Berlin's finest lodgings, aptly named the Grand Hotel. Baron von Geigern (John Barrymore) has both the title and bearing of an aristocrat, yet is, in reality, a notorious jewel thief. He has checked in to steal a pearl necklace that belongs to world-famous ballerina Grusinskaya (Greta Garbo), who is in an the adjoining room. The Baron will ultimately fail to obtain the necklace, but succeed in stealing the temperamental dancer's heart. 

A few doors down is Mr. Preysing (Wallace Beery), an executive with a nasty disposition, who has hired Ms. Flaemmchen (Joan Crawford), a secretary, to accompany him so that he can catch up on his correspondences. While there, Preysing runs into Kringelein (Lionel Barrymore), a sad, sickly man who works in the accounting department of Preysing's firm. Kringelein is terminally ill, and has spent his entire life's savings on a room at the hotel, in the hope of experiencing a little of the high life before reaching the end of the line. 

Grand Hotel was the first bona-fide 'star-studded extravaganza' ever produced in Hollywood, and its stars certainly did their part to make it a memorable one. Wallace Beery bellows and huffs as the egotistical Mr. Preysing, a man who is used to getting his own way.  His arrogant demeanor will bring about a tragic turn of events. Joan Crawford is sexy in the role of Ms. Flaemmchen, perhaps a bit sexier than I would have thought possible for a film in 1932. Her Ms. Flaemmchen is alluring enough to capture any man's heart, and she damn near captures them all. John Barrymore and Greta Garbo generate a great deal of passion as star-crossed lovers who throw caution to the wind, undertaking an intense love affair despite the fact they've only just met. 

Then there's Lionel Barrymore as Mr. Kringelein, the everyman who longs to live like a king. Like us, Kringelein is an outsider to this world of opulence, which essentially makes him our guide through the film. In a lively barroom scene, Kringelein lives out the dream of every employee when he stands up to his boss, Mr. Preysing, and tells the self-important executive exactly what he thinks of him. Lionel Barrymore, who became well-known years later for his role as the villainous Mr. Potter in Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life, is Grand Hotel's lone heroic figure, a man who maintains his moral bearing to the very end. 

If you're looking for the one film that exemplifies the movies of the '30s, then I would recommend a short stay at Grand Hotel. Chock full of romance, drama, humor and tragedy, Grand Hotel is grand, indeed.









5 comments:

  1. Talk about a star studded Extravaganza! I thoroughly enjoyed this movie as well as the extras on the DVD (which include the "red carpet" at the movie's premier).

    Curiously, it's small film - in terms of the setting, and story, and yet the who's who in 1930s Hollywood are featured in it. Quite an interesting film.

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  2. @Klaus: You make a good point; the overall feel of the film, when you take into account the level of star power involved, is small. Maybe that's what makes it so good!

    Thanks for the comment. It's appreciated.

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  3. I think that's exactly it. It really is a showcase for acting, dialogue. It reminds me of any number of Woody Allen films from the perspective of the plot - which is often secondary to the dialogue.

    The only weakness in the film was Garbo’s over the top performance and the some sloppy editing - apparently they re-shot some of her scenes (and it was pretty obvious which ones).

    On the other hand, I thought Joan Crawford stole every scene she was in - simply brilliant!

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  4. I'm actually a Garbo fan, but I will agree that this wasn't her strongest film.

    As for Crawford: absolutely! She came off as very alluring, very sexual, which really shocked me (seeing as this was early 30's). Of the two, Crawford is definitely the strongest.

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  5. I have not seen Grand Hotel and although this review was very convincing and entertaining probably never will, but I was wondering do you think this films story would hold with a younger audience who aren't acquainted with films of this ilk?

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