Frisco Jenny (William A.Wellman, 1932) SATRip VO

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Frisco Jenny (William A.Wellman, 1932) SATRip VO

Mensaje por spione » Lun 14 Ene, 2008 19:04

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FRISCO JENNY (1932)




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DIRECTOR
William A.Wellman


GUIÓN
Gerald Beaumont
Lillie Hayward
John Francis Larkin
Robert Lord
Wilson Mizner


CAST
Ruth Chatterton ... Frisco Jenny Sandoval
Louis Calhern ... Steve Dutton
Helen Jerome Eddy ... Amah
Donald Cook ... Dan Reynolds
James Murray ... Dan McAllister
Hallam Cooley ... Willie Gleason
Pat O'Malley ... Policeman Pat O'Hoolihan
Harold Huber ... George Weaver
Robert Emmett O'Connor ... Jim Sandoval
Willard Robertson ... Police Captain Tom


MÚSICA ORIGINAL
Cliff Hess


FOTOGRAFIA
Sidney Hickox


SINOPSIS
[quote]
Ruth Chatterton stars in a retread of her earlier Madame X titled Frisco Jenny. In the prologue, Jenny becomes pregnant by a young man who is killed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Bearing her child in secret, Jenny gives up custody to a wealthy couple. The years pass: Through the auspices of a crooked politician (Louis Calhern), Jenny becomes the Number One "Madame" of San Francisco, with interests in several other illicit activities. Crusading DA Donald Cook decides to rid the city of Jenny's operations--little suspecting that the notorious woman is actually his own mother!
Spoiler: mostrar
Wild Bill Wellman clashed with many of the male stars he directed, even getting into fist fights with a few of them, but he met his match when Warner Bros. production head Darryl F. Zanuck paired him with the studio's top female star of the early '30s, Ruth Chatterton, for this sex-charged 1932 tale of mother love. Made in the years before strict Production Code enforcement, Frisco Jenny is among the films of the era to benefit from critical re-evaluation in recent years.

Although most often associated with male-oriented films like the World War I aviation drama Wings (1927) and the gangster classic The Public Enemy (1931), Wellman had also carved a niche directing women, albeit in hard-edged films like Night Nurse (1931) and The Purchase Price (1932), both starring the young Barbara Stanwyck, and Safe in Hell (1931) with Dorothy Mackaill. It shouldn't have come as a surprise that Zanuck assigned him to Frisco Jenny, the tale of an enterprising woman orphaned by the San Francisco earthquake who becomes the city's top madam. The fact that the film was co-authored by his friend Wilson Mizner, a noted restaurateur and con artist who would be the subject of the Stephen Sondheim musical Bounce, should have made the project even more attractive to him.

Chatterton was also a logical choice for the film. The stage star, who had held out on going into the movies until she was 35, debuting opposite Emil Jannings in Sins of the Fathers (1928), had scored her greatest screen success in Madame X (1929), the story of a fallen woman who ends up being defended in a murder trial by the son she had given up years earlier. Frisco Jenny worked a reversal on the earlier film's plot, with Chatterton prosecuted by a district attorney who doesn't know she's his mother. Just to make the resemblance stronger, in both films she is on trial for killing the man who tried to expose her connection to the young man.

The only problem was Chatterton's reputation for fighting with directors. Far from an insecure starlet, she had come to the screen confident in her abilities as an actress and her sense of what made a good story (she would later become a successful novelist). When Zanuck introduced her as Wellman's new star, the director refused to work with her. Having heard of Wellman's reputation, Chatterton issued her own refusal. Zanuck had to threaten to destroy their careers to get them to work together.

At first, they kept their distance. Wellman worked on the script without consulting Chatterton, and let an assistant director handle her costume tests. When shooting started, they barely spoke to each other. After three days, however, she called a truce, claiming that up to that point it had been her most enjoyable filmmaking experience. He was happy to acquiesce, having realized what a good actress she was. In addition, she was married to George Brent, an actor he admired. As a result, Wellman and Chatterton became good friends, and she would later hail Frisco Jenny as her favorite film.

Brent originally had been scheduled to co-star with his wife in Frisco Jenny, but Zanuck had pulled him out to join the cast of 42nd Street (1933). The married stars would team with Wellman the following year for Lilly Turner, which turned out to be one of Chatterton's most popular Warner Bros. films.

Frisco Jenny, however, wasn't a success. Critics and audiences were a little too aware of the film's similarities to Madame X, leading to mixed reviews and tepid box office. Although Wellman was praised for his staging of the San Francisco earthquake, a combination of footage from Warner's Old San Francisco (1927) and original material Wellman had shot, Mordaunt Hall of the New York Times complained that "the film does not live up to those scenes of destruction, terror and death." In particular, the timing of the quake, which hits just as Chatterton's on-screen father slaps her during a fight, made it seem that the disaster was God's punishment for smacking around one of the screen's top stars.

In recent years, Frisco Jenny has been among the pre-Code films rediscovered and re-evaluated thanks to theatrical revivals and cable television screenings. New fans have been impressed by Chatterton's depiction of a tough woman who takes charge of her own destiny long before women's liberation and Wellman's energetic direction and creative camera placement.
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My TCM rip
Occasional TCM watermark
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Ripped with Gordian Knot

File Size (in bytes) ..: 724,135,936 bytes
Runtime (# of frames) .: 01:10:38 (101616 frames)

Video Codec ...........: XviD
Frame Size ............: 576x432 () [=] [=1.333]
FPS ...................: 23.976
Video Bitrate .........: 1298 kb/s
Bits per Pixel ........: 0.218 bpp
B-VOP, N-VOP, QPel, GMC ......: [B-VOP]...[]...[]...[]

Audio Codec ...........: 0x0055(MP3, ISO) MPEG-1 Layer 3
Sample Rate ...........: 48000 Hz
Audio bitrate .........: 60 kb/s [1 channel(s)] VBR audio
Interleave ............: 42 ms
No. of audio streams ..: 1


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