अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंU.S. Marine sergeants Quirt and Flagg are inveterate romantic rivals on peacetime assignments in China and the Philippines. In 1917, W.W. I brings them to France, where Flagg, now a captain,... सभी पढ़ेंU.S. Marine sergeants Quirt and Flagg are inveterate romantic rivals on peacetime assignments in China and the Philippines. In 1917, W.W. I brings them to France, where Flagg, now a captain, takes up with flirtatious Charmaine, inn-keeper's daughter. Of course, Quirt has to arriv... सभी पढ़ेंU.S. Marine sergeants Quirt and Flagg are inveterate romantic rivals on peacetime assignments in China and the Philippines. In 1917, W.W. I brings them to France, where Flagg, now a captain, takes up with flirtatious Charmaine, inn-keeper's daughter. Of course, Quirt has to arrive and spoil his fun. But the harsh realities of war and the threat of a shotgun marriage g... सभी पढ़ें
- पुरस्कार
- कुल 3 जीत
- Charmaine de la Cognac
- (as Dolores del Rio)
- Mulcahy
- (as Pat Rooney)
- French Soldier
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Soldier
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Extra
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Waiter at Cafe
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Such an important happening was depicted in the cinema, during the conflict or after, in very different ways. With various degrees of success, documentaries, dramas, realistic or even funny features were put on the screen. "What Price Glory", a film directed by Herr Raoul Walsh, was one of those films with the First World War in the background.
The underlying problem of this film for this German count for not considering this oeuvre as remarkable as others with similar subject is the concept, the personal artistic intentions and way the director faces the story and its surroundings. That is to say, "What Price Glory" is a film that uses the Great War as an excuse not as a whole. The director is interested in especially depicting the love affairs included in the film and a strange comradeship between the two male main characters.
And that it would not be a problem if Herr Walsh avoided many stereotyped characters: - Two U.S. Marine sergeants, that is to say, two hard-boiled, cursing and womanizing men: -Herr Victor McLaglen und Herr Edmund Lowe who fight among themselves for the love of a naughty French peasant ( Dame Dolores del Rio ) and from time to time, against the Germans - Stereotyped characters and situations that probably worked in those ancient times but today are dated.
The film is a classic representation, a film with a war in background that lacks emotion in spite some interesting war scenes that are not enough to avoid having an enormous sensation of "déjà vu" during its long two hours. That's the worst comment that can be said about any silent film, a feeling of indifference, a sense that it's all the same to the spectator.
And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count must return to the aristocratic trenches.
Herr Graf Ferdinand Von Galitzien http://ferdinandvongalitzien.blogspot.com/
*** (out of 4)
Raoul Walsh's version of the popular Maxwell Anderson play about U.S. Marines Flagg (Victor McLaglen) and Quirt (Edmund Lowe), two rivals who soon find themselves in France during WWI but their personal battle is over a beautiful woman (Dolores del Rio) they've both fallen for. There's no question that this here is much better than the John Ford remake with James Cagney but in regards to the war pictures of the silent era, I'd rank this one here a little towards the bottom as it certainly doesn't measure up to stuff like THE BIG PARADE and WINGS. With that said, I think there's enough good things here to make it worth viewing. One of the highlights is certainly the battle sequences that take place towards the end of the movie. I think these are directed with a lot of skill as there's no question that Walsh knew had to build up these scenes and make them tense. Another thing the film has going for it are the performances by the three leads. McLaglen clearly steals the picture since he's got the more memorable character but he has no problem playing the giant brute with a heart. Lowe plays that good-looking fun guy, something he'd do throughout his career. Dolores del Rio wasn't all that believable being a French woman but she too still did a nice job with the part. My biggest problem with this film is that I just never really cared about the love story. This here turned out to be a rather big problem because this really eats up the majority of the running time and I think the anti-war message and war scenes would have been much stronger had the love stuff not brought everything down. I'd also say that the stereotypes were rather boring and it made everything way too easy to figure out. From who gets the girl to which characters will eventually die. Still, WHAT PRICE GLORY is worth watching for the battle scenes and performances.
Ironically, the pioneering film was based on the 1924 play of the same name by the pairing of Laurence Stallings, a World War One wounded veteran-turned-writer, and teacher-turned-playwright Maxwell Anderson. The stage play was known for its spoken vulgarity by the two leads, a fact that transferred over to the screen, much to the consternation of lip-readers in the movie theaters. "What Price Glory?" details a years-long rivalry between Quirt (Edmund Lowe) and Flagg (Victor McLaglen) for a women. Their initial confrontation before the camera serves as an example of the profanities spewing from their mouths between them. Since the film was silent, and the inter titles didn't quite transcribe the exact words, those who could read lips were stunned at what the two mouthed. They flooded the Fox Films Studio with tons of complaining letters.
William Fox wanted to replicate the success of King Vidor's earlier "The Big Parade" showing the struggle in WW1 between American and German forces. "What Price Glory?" Almost equaled the success of its counterpart MGM epic, with the Raoul Walsh directed film the year's second highest box office motion picture, combining comedy and dramatic battle scenes. The film follows Quirt and Flagg as they scrap one other again for the love of another woman, this time for Charlemagne (Dolores del Rio), the daughter of a French innkeeper they met while taking a break from the front.
This was only the fifth American film Mexican-born Del Rio appeared. Discovered in Mexico the year before, she was the first Latin American actress to become a major star in Hollywood. Her stunning looks were compared to the male version of Rudolph Valentino during those silent movie days. Despite her Spanish-language upbringing, Del Rio was able to make the transition to sound with an English lint to her Hispanic accent.
"What Price Glory?" box office allure was helped by an accompanying sound track released three months after its premier in January 1927. Fox had contracted with Theodore Case, the former partner to inventor Lee de Forest in developing a sound-on-film technique. The two had combined their innovations on placing sound waves on the same film strip alongside the visuals. The two had a falling out, allowing Case to modify and improve the technology. Fox provided the funding to fine-tune the audio system as well as to bring the technology into movie theaters. The end result, called Movietone, gave Fox the ability to provide a musical and sound effects audio track to run coincidedly with its earlier-produced silent movie. "What Price Glory?" was the first feature film introducing Movietone to the public. Case's sound system was the third of four competing formats vying for dominance in the transition from silent to 'talkie' movies.
Raoul Walsh directed two of the three sequels to "What Price Glory?": a very early talkie, 1929's 'The Cock-Eyed World,' and 1931's "Women of All Nations." John Blystone directed the third sequel, 1933's "Hot Pepper." All three stared the buddies Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen, who became fast friends towards the end of "What Price Glory?" Director John Ford took a swing at the original play's storyline in his 1952 film, "What Price Glory," with James Cagney and Dan Daily, arch-enemies-turned-best friends.
What Laurence Stallings and Maxwell Anderson wrote got to the silent big screen for Fox Films in 1926 and it was deservedly a box office hit. Unlike The Big Parade it's Broadway success brought a built in audience to the movie theaters.
The male buddy film may well have originated with this film as Victor McLaglen and Edmund Lowe as Captain Flagg and Sergeant Quirt gave such powerful performances. Later on Warner Brothers by teaming James Cagney and Pat O'Brien teamed them in a variety of films and situations whereas McLaglen and Lowe only played variations of Flagg and Quirt when they weren't using those names. You can make a case for either McLaglen/Lowe or Cagney/O'Brien for inventing the genre.
One thing that is important is that like The Virginian which novel and play set the standard for western characters, What Price Glory did so for the male buddy film. These were not stock characters then, this is the original.
I'd be hard pressed to pick out whether The Big Parade or What Price Glory did the battle scenes best, capturing the horror of total war that the First World War was. In terms of plot I'd say What Price Glory has it over The Big Parade as a story. The two Marines McLaglen and Lowe are friendly rivals over women or liquor, but fierce fighting companions in combat. The object of their affection is Charmaine played by Dolores Del Rio, the comely innkeeper's daughter. Charmaine has her own song, one of the earliest written for a film of the same name that was a big seller in The Roaring Twenties. That also contributed mightily to the box office for What Price Glory.
The First Marine Division was the first American troops to actually see combat in France. These two and their fellow Marines might well be part of the Belleau Wood operations where Marines were rushed into bolster French and British troops when the German offensive threatened to break through.
What Price Glory holds up magnificently from the silent era, still as a reminder of the futility of war and the plucky comradeship that can develop from that shared experience.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIn the argument between Sgt. Quirt and Capt. Flagg, the actors actually swore at each other. Hundreds of complaint letters were received by Fox by angry lip-readers who recognized the words.
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $3,60,000(अनुमानित)
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 56 मिनट
- ध्वनि मिश्रण