Richard Barthelmess in William Wellman's Heroes for Sale (1933)
As America continues its steady and steep descent into a dark night of the soul, distressed citizens cope as best they can. Some rant and debate on social media, some organize and take to the streets, others find themselves spending more on alcohol…or other legal and illegal substances. For the die-hard film buff, movie-watching can provide relief and, on occasion, a history lesson.
Next month, in a timely move, San Francisco’s Roxie Theatre will host a four-day film series, The Dark Side of the Dream, screening twelve films produced in the US between 1933 and 1964 that recall earlier dark moments of the country’s past and remind us, if we need reminding, that the dark side of the American Dream is nothing new and that one of the primary reasons it is wise to know history is to learn from it and avoid its mistakes.
The Dark Side of the Dream, which runs from March 23 – 26, is a co-production of Elliot Lavine of I Wake Up Dreaming, producer of many Bay Area film noir and other film series over the past 25 years, and Don Malcolm’s Midcentury Productions, the company responsible for annual international and French film noir festivals in San Francisco. Together they have put together a program of “subversive cinema for subversive times.” A recent preview screening presented three films exploring different aspects of the dream and its downside:
Black Legion (1937)
Warner Bros.’ Black Legion (1937) features Humphrey Bogart in a pre-stardom turn for Archie Mayo (Bordertown, The Petrified Forest) as a working man who, when he loses a promotion to a foreign-born co-worker, joins a vigilante group that terrorizes immigrants.M (1951), directed by Joseph Losey (The Boy with Green Hair, The Servant) is an Americanized remake of the 1931 Fritz Lang/Peter Lorre classic about the capture of a serial killer and mob justice. Director Losey was a target of HUAC (the House Un-American Activities Committee) and blacklisted in the early ‘50s. He left the US in 1953 and settled in London, never to work in Hollywood or live in the US again. Many of those involved in making this version of M were HUAC targets.Heroes for Sale(1933), directed by William Wellman (A Star is Born, The Ox-Bow Incident, The High and the Mighty) for Warner Bros., is a Depression-era social justice epic. Richard Barthelmess, Loretta Young and Aline McMahon star. An overflowing plot follows Barthelmess from fighting in the trenches of World War I through just about every indignity to which a returning veteran could be subjected. His battlefield heroism is appropriated by a well-to-do but cowardly fellow soldier, his war-injury-induced morphine addiction meets with zero compassion when he returns home, his business success is destroyed by corporate greed, and his wife is killed in a mob riot he is trying to stop. Finally, having finished a prison term he didn’t deserve and now suspected of being a Communist simply because he has a social conscience, he is driven out of town and on the bum at the height of the Great Depression.
The current political climate inspired this series, and Lavine notes that, “Even as America is dealing with the very same issues today, it’s amazing to see how great filmmakers brought all of this to our attention in earlier times.” He adds, “This series is really the first time I’ve been able to cover so much of that territory.” The Dark Side of the Dream will spotlight twelve hard-hitting films in six double bills over four days. Among the highlights are Robert Rossen's Body and Soul (1947) starring John Garfield, blacklisted in Hollywood not long before suffering a fatal heart attack at age 39, and Elia Kazan's prophetic A Face in the Crowd (1957), with its riveting tour-de-force lead performance by Andy Griffith.
Click here for detailed program information and the full schedule.