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Judge Priest

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 20 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
2670
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Will Rogers in Judge Priest (1934)
On this IMDbrief, we celebrate four unsung Black heroes of film history and four films to watch to get to know them better.
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Unsung Black Heroes of Film History ansehen
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ComedyDramaRomance

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuJudge Priest, a proud Confederate veteran, uses common sense and considerable humanity to dispense justice in a small town in the Post-Bellum Kentucky.Judge Priest, a proud Confederate veteran, uses common sense and considerable humanity to dispense justice in a small town in the Post-Bellum Kentucky.Judge Priest, a proud Confederate veteran, uses common sense and considerable humanity to dispense justice in a small town in the Post-Bellum Kentucky.

  • Regie
    • John Ford
  • Drehbuch
    • Irvin S. Cobb
    • Dudley Nichols
    • Lamar Trotti
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Will Rogers
    • Tom Brown
    • Anita Louise
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,2/10
    2670
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • Irvin S. Cobb
      • Dudley Nichols
      • Lamar Trotti
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Will Rogers
      • Tom Brown
      • Anita Louise
    • 40Benutzerrezensionen
    • 16Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Unsung Black Heroes of Film History
    Clip 4:30
    Unsung Black Heroes of Film History

    Fotos56

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    Topbesetzung42

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    Will Rogers
    Will Rogers
    • Judge Priest
    Tom Brown
    Tom Brown
    • Jerome Priest
    Anita Louise
    Anita Louise
    • Ellie May Gillespie
    Henry B. Walthall
    Henry B. Walthall
    • Rev. Ashby Brand
    David Landau
    David Landau
    • Bob Gillis
    Rochelle Hudson
    Rochelle Hudson
    • Virginia Maydew
    Roger Imhof
    Roger Imhof
    • Billy Gaynor
    Frank Melton
    Frank Melton
    • Flem Talley
    Charley Grapewin
    Charley Grapewin
    • Sergeant Jimmy Bagby
    Berton Churchill
    Berton Churchill
    • Senator Horace Maydew
    Brenda Fowler
    Brenda Fowler
    • Mrs. Caroline Priest
    Francis Ford
    Francis Ford
    • Juror No. 12
    Hattie McDaniel
    Hattie McDaniel
    • Aunt Dilsey
    • (as Hattie McDaniels)
    Stepin Fetchit
    Stepin Fetchit
    • Jeff Poindexter
    Melba Brown
    • Black Singer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Thelma Brown
    • Black Singer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Vera Brown
    • Black Singer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Grace Goodall
    Grace Goodall
    • Mrs. Maydew
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • John Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • Irvin S. Cobb
      • Dudley Nichols
      • Lamar Trotti
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen40

    6,22.6K
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    7movingpicturegal

    The Little Colonel Meets Colonel Sanders

    In the South, Kentucky circa 1890, we meet Judge Priest (played by Will Rogers), laid-back circuit court judge who dresses like Colonel Sanders and has bigger interests than court trials - namely lawn croquet, mint juleps, Confederate veteran social gatherings, taffy pulls, and his new-found friendship with an accused chicken thief (played by Stepin Fetchit) put on trial in his courtroom, who gives the judge tips on fishing for catfish. The judge also enjoys matchmaking for his nephew Rome (Tom Brown), a young man who has just graduated from law school and who is in love with the pretty girl next door in spite of his stuffy mama's protests (seems the girl isn't good enough for the mighty "Kentucky Priest's", mama has her eye on someone else for her son). Soon the film switches gear when our young lawyer gets his first case and defends a local man put on trial.

    This film was actually quite a bit better than I was expecting - Will Rogers, whose role dominates this film (aside from Henry B. Walthall, who has a smaller, but important piece here) was more interesting in this than I have seen him in other roles, probably because he comes across as more like himself than a character. Henry B. Walthall, the handsome "Little Colonel" in "The Birth of a Nation", still looks attractive here nearly 20 years later, a real silver fox to my eyes. Hattie McDaniel plays a stereotypical black mammy, singing and hanging laundry and preparing the judge yet another mint julep in most of her scenes, yet comes across with loads of charm. Really quite an interesting film.
    9Boba_Fett1138

    Excellent subtle '30's John Ford comedy.

    '30's comedies aren't exactly known for their subtlety and they mostly consist out of physical humor. This movie forms a great and wonderful exception to this.

    This is one great subtle comedy that is mostly funny thanks to its very amusing and extreme stereotyped characters. It of course also really helps that they are being portrayed by some really great actors and are being directed by one great director; John Ford.

    Will Rogers was totally great in his role. He seemed very natural with his acting but at the same time managed to play his character in a comical way. He was a greatly talented comedy actor, who was already a popular one during the silent era. He would had continued to play many more comical roles I'm sure, had he not died one year after this movie, in a plane crash piloted by the one-eyed pioneer aviator Wiley Post. Hattie McDaniel also does in this movie what she is best known for, playing a likable maid role. She is best known for her Acedemy Award winning role in "Gone with the Wind", which also made her the first black actor winning the great award.

    Even though John Ford began directing movies as early as 1917, it wasn't until the '30's that his career really took off and he gained a real big celebrity status. He also isn't best known for comedies but mostly for his western's, often starring John Wayne. Till this date he is still the director with the most Academy Awards for best directing (4 of them). I think that says already enough about the qualities of this man. With this movie he also really seemed ahead of its time, by picking an all different and very humble approach of the story and comedy.

    The story is actually quite simple but oh so great. It actually is quite well layered, even though the movie its simplicity might make you overlook this. It features lots of different element involving the characters in this movie, on both the comical as well as the more dramatic level. I also especially really like how the judge tries to hook up his cousin with his neighbor girl.

    The movie also truly benefits from its typical southern atmosphere. The movie is set in a southern town, which shows in the movie its characters, their accents and just overall atmosphere of the entire movie.

    This movie was a great pleasant surprise!

    9/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    mkilmer

    Will Rogers as Will Rogers.

    This is warm movie with plenty of sympathetic characters. And plenty of nasty ones. A young love is threatened by a class-conscious mother, while the uncle is… well, he's Will Rogers. (The character's name is the title, Judge Billy Priest, but I suspect he's the "Will Rogers" character.) As with anything cast in the deep south in the 1890s, there are some moments and characters with which you might find yourself uncomfortable. I was taken aback by "Jeff Poindexter," portrayed by then-popular black actor Stepin Fetchit. (Fetchit has an awful, partisan political bio here at IMDb – the man deserves much better -- but he is an interesting story.) He seemed to me to be a set of overblown stereotypes, but the Judge befriends him and my wife was simply taken with him.

    There's a lot to like about this film, although it does drag in places. (I was surprised when the lawn party ends.) I had to smile, though, when the judge got to play lawyer, called on witness, and the universe stood still to the strains of "Dixie."
    8bkoganbing

    In Old Kentucky

    Will Rogers did three films with director John Ford who probably knew best how to utilize Will Rogers folksy charm and personality on the screen. Judge Priest is the best of the three films Rogers did with Ford. The film is based on a character created by Rogers fellow American humorist Irvin S. Cobb.

    Cobb's Judge Priest stories are based on characters created from his childhood in Paducah, Kentucky. Priest is a man very much like Will Rogers in real life, full of homespun wisdom and common sense. The casting is almost perfect, I can't think of anyone else who could have done the role better.

    The film is an amalgam of several of those stories the main plot line being the assault of Frank Melton by town misanthrope David Landau. The case would normally come before Will Rogers, but he's forced to recuse himself because it's the first case of Tom Brown who is the nephew of Rogers. Brown is back home now, a newly minted lawyer and he's involved with a girl from the wrong side of the tracks, Anita Louise. There's a connection between his personal and professional life that Brown little suspects.

    Cobb's childhood Kentucky is an idyllic place where even the newly freed black people are contented in their second class status. The racist overtone of Judge Priest is unmistakable and why the film is criticized today. However Irvin S. Cobb was painting an accurate picture of the servile blacks, servile because they had to be. But the Stepin Fetchit character goes way over the top.

    Judge Priest was later remade by Ford in the Fifties as The Sun Shines Bright and though the more obvious racial stereotyping got cleaned up somewhat, it could never be eliminated from the film.

    But the film because of the presence of Will Rogers gets a high rating from me. It's a chance to see one America's wittiest and wisest men at his homespun best and that opportunity should not be passed up.
    dougdoepke

    Whitewashed

    The movie is not only about the Confederacy, but seems to have been made during the Confederacy. It not only looks like an antique, but also plays like one. From the snail-like pacing to the exaggerated acting to the crude racial stereotypes, it points to a long gone era of film-making and, in the process, shows why that era is long gone. Frankly, I tuned in because I'd never seen humorist Will Rogers in a movie, but I had enjoyed his trenchant iconoclasm, so I guess I had expectations. Now I think he should have stuck to rope twirling and skewering politicians because his Judge Priest is so unrelentingly folksy as to rival the slow-talking Fetchit in knee-deep stereotype. Director Ford was always more comfortable directing caricature than catching nuance, though he could do the latter on occasion. So, it's no surprise that he fairly wallows in the opportunities proffered here. Then too, this romanticized view of the Old South, circa 1890, must have appealed to a director who specialized in romanticizing the past, especially in the so-called winning-of-the-West. In fact, Ford was so enamored with the whitewashed material here, he made it again twenty years later under the title The Sun Shines Bright. In my view, once was more than enough.

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    • Wissenswertes
      "Based on Irvin S. Cobb's character of 'Judge Priest'" was a compromise onscreen source credit. Fox wanted to use "Based on the Judge Priest Stories by Irwin S. Cobb," but Mr. Cobb objected because he had written over 70 stories, was still writing them, and the statement might inhibit future sales of them.
    • Zitate

      Judge William 'Billy' Priest: Your honor, as I recollect the procedure, at the time bein' I'm an ordinary member of the bar in good standing.

      Judge Floyd Fairleigh: Not ordinary, sir, but absolutely in good standing.

    • Crazy Credits
      Opening card: The figures in this story are familiar ghosts of my own boyhood. The war between the states was over, but its tragedies and comedies haunted every grown man's mind, and the stories that were swapped took deep root in my memory. There was one man Down Yonder I came especially to admire for he seemed typical of the tolerance of that day and the wisdom of that almost vanished generation. I called him Judge Priest, and I tried to draw reasonably fair likenesses of him and his neighbors and the town in which we lived. An old Kentucky town in 1890. --- --- Irvin S. Cobb
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Of Black America: Black History: Lost, Stolen or Strayed (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      My Old Kentucky Home, Good Night
      (1853) (uncredited)

      Music and Lyrics by Stephen Foster

      Played during the opening and end credits, and often in the score

      Also Sung by Hattie McDaniel, Melba Brown, Thelma Brown, Vera Brown,

      Will Rogers and others

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 28. September 1934 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Old Judge Priest
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Fox Film Corporation
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 20 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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