अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंOne More Spring is a 1935 film about three people (Janet Gaynor, Warner Baxter, and Walter Woolf King) living together in the maintenance shed at Central Park as an alternative to living on ... सभी पढ़ेंOne More Spring is a 1935 film about three people (Janet Gaynor, Warner Baxter, and Walter Woolf King) living together in the maintenance shed at Central Park as an alternative to living on the streets. The film was written by Edwin J. Burke from the Robert Nathan novel and direc... सभी पढ़ेंOne More Spring is a 1935 film about three people (Janet Gaynor, Warner Baxter, and Walter Woolf King) living together in the maintenance shed at Central Park as an alternative to living on the streets. The film was written by Edwin J. Burke from the Robert Nathan novel and directed.
- Morris Rosenberg
- (as Walter King)
- Park Policeman
- (as Nick Foran)
- Undetermined Role
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Undetermined Role
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- Undetermined Role
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Undetermined Role
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Undetermined Role
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
- Child
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
"One More Spring" gives one of the most realistic depictions of the Depression that I've ever seen. Many people in Depression-era America believed that the stock-market crash was entirely caused by corporate millionaires. Here, the upper class is represented by Mr. Sheridan, who has lost nearly all of his wealth in the crash that has ruined so many. He must deal with the fact that the failure of his own company has also caused the ruin of so many hundreds of his working-class employees. Grant Mitchell gives an excellent performance in what could have been a stereotyped role. At one point - disgraced and ruined - Mitchell pauses on a bridge over the lake in Central Park. He steps onto the bridge's parapet, leans over towards the water, pauses again as he considers ending it all ... the look on Mitchell's face during this scene is unforgettable.
"One More Spring" is well-directed by Henry King, one of the two most under-rated directors of Hollywood's golden era. (The other being Sam Wood.) The only sour note in "One More Spring" is a brief appearance by Stepin Fetchit, doing his usual "I'se comin', boss" routine. Fetchit was very popular in the 1930s, and he was probably written into this film as "insurance" to help make "One More Spring" more successful at the box-office. This delicately beautiful film would work better if Stepin Fetchit's scenes - entirely irrelevant to the plot - were deleted.
Of course for a nice picture you need a nice girl and Janet Gaynor was always a nice girl in every film. Broke, unemployed, and starving she gets taken in by a kind pair of men and she agrees with Warner Baxter and Walter Woolf King that there will be no hanky panky. As there was a Code in place now, there was none.
Both Baxter and King are already charity cases. They are living in a shed in Central Park where one of the groundskeepers Roger Imhoff keeps his equipment. I'm not sure but even in the 30s Imhoff letting these two live there might not have gotten Imhoff canned. But the agreed upon price is for unemployed violinist King to teach Imhoff how to play Mother Machree on the fiddle. Of course if he had an ear for music or any talent whatever in that direction it would help. But Imhoff is determined to serenade his missus Jane Darwell with Mother Machree come what may,
Bank president Grant Mitchell after the bank failure of 1933 also comes to live with them. He's rich with some sense of social responsibility, he loses his own fortune to keep his bank from going under.
Fans of Gaynor and Baxter ought to love this film. And if there was ever a film that applauded the New Deal especially it's banking provisions One More Spring is it.
In the case of "One More Spring", you perhaps understand why Hollywood avoided showing the Depression....as folks stayed away from the film in droves. Director Henry King talked about this years later, as apparently folks went to the movies to avoid thinking about the bleakness of the era.
The story is about three homeless folks who are out of work and have no place to live. The first two, Jaret and Morris (Warner Baxter and Walter Wolf King), meet and try sleeping in the park...but are told by police to keep moving. But they fortunately meet a working stiff who keeps his tools in a large shed in the park...and he invites them to live there in this shack. But things become a bit complicated when Jaret meets up with Elizabeth (Janet Gaynor) and she, too, is homeless and hungry...so he invites her to come live with him and Morris. What's next? See the film to find out for yourself...and find out about the most unusual fourth addition to this cozy 'family'.
While I can understand folks during the Depression not wanting to see this, the film i not all hopelessness and despair and ends on some very positive notes. This, combined with a lovely script and nice acting (particularly by Baxter) make this a joy to watch....well worth seeing.
Jaret Otkar (Warner Baxter) has a bankrupt antique shop and everything is auctioned off but Napoleon's bed which the auctioneer can't even get a quarter for, so he lets Jaret keep it. A starving violinist, Martin Rosenberg (Walter Woolf King) comes into the shop after the auction, Jaret feeds him, and the two decide to team up for survival. Now Jaret is realistic and stoic towards almost everything that happens to him except this one thing - he decides to wheel the bed into Central Park and sleep there. The next morning a cop tells the two to move along. The two encounter a kindly maintenance man, Mr. Sweeney (Roger Imhof) who lets them store their bed in his toolshed and sleep there in return for violin lessons from Rosenberg, who is less than enthusiastic about the prospect. Later the two encounter homeless actress Elizabeth Cheney (Janet Gaynor) and now the team is a threesome.
Cheney acts as the housekeeper for the three, Rosenberg keeps a roof over their heads with his violin lessons, and Otkar is a businessman, so he is central to them not starving. He comes up with schemes that include distracting a Central Park Zoo caretaker so he can steal some of the meat intended for the lions. Helping them out is the maintenance man that got them the shed in the first place, with some occasional bread and tea and blankets.
Sweeney and his wife are lucky. They both have unskilled but necessary jobs, so their modest but steady living probably shoves them into the middle class. But then their bank fails. And now all are just trying to get through the winter to the titular "one more spring".
So the trio not only has the challenge of survival, two of them have to deal with a fellow that doesn't seem to understand the peril of his own situation - Rosenberg. He is very rude to people who are in a position to help him, thinks he is too good to play his violin for passers by, and is just disagreeable in general. I'm not sure why he is made so obnoxious except maybe this was to contrast with the rather sweet and generous personalities of the other characters.
Warner Brothers is mainly known as the studio that spent the most time on the Great Depression with all of their films about gangsters, people who turn to crime out of necessity, and even Broadway shows with the backdrop of the Great Depression. But this little entry from Fox takes a completely different tack on those hard times and it is different from anything else of its genre I've seen and is definitely worth your time.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIn the early 1970s director Henry King was interviewed for the American Film Institute's oral history project, and spoke of this film. "One More Spring was a very popular book. I read it on the train coming from New York and thought it would make a charming picture, but it didn't. People didn't want to see things that were so real, happening around them all the time. It was made as a comedy, but became too serious. It was really a tragedy." He also said: "It would have been great to do it after the Depression, but to do it during the middle didn't work out."
- भाव
Elizabeth Cheney: I was born an orphan, I guess. I don't remember being anything else.
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