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The Younger Generation

  • 1929
  • Passed
  • 1 घं 15 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
6.3/10
413
आपकी रेटिंग
Ricardo Cortez, Lina Basquette, and Jean Hersholt in The Younger Generation (1929)
DramaRomance

अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंSoap-opera about a social-climbing Jewish man and his old-world parents who are heartbroken by his rejection of them.Soap-opera about a social-climbing Jewish man and his old-world parents who are heartbroken by his rejection of them.Soap-opera about a social-climbing Jewish man and his old-world parents who are heartbroken by his rejection of them.

  • निर्देशक
    • Frank Capra
  • लेखक
    • Fannie Hurst
    • Sonya Levien
    • Howard J. Green
  • स्टार
    • Jean Hersholt
    • Lina Basquette
    • Ricardo Cortez
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    6.3/10
    413
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Frank Capra
    • लेखक
      • Fannie Hurst
      • Sonya Levien
      • Howard J. Green
    • स्टार
      • Jean Hersholt
      • Lina Basquette
      • Ricardo Cortez
    • 13यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 8आलोचक समीक्षाएं
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • फ़ोटो8

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    टॉप कलाकार22

    बदलाव करें
    Jean Hersholt
    Jean Hersholt
    • Julius Goldfish - Pa
    Lina Basquette
    Lina Basquette
    • Birdie Goldfish
    Ricardo Cortez
    Ricardo Cortez
    • Morris Goldfish
    Rex Lease
    Rex Lease
    • Eddie Lesser
    Rosa Rosanova
    Rosa Rosanova
    • Tilda Goldfish - Ma
    Syd Crossley
    Syd Crossley
    • Goldfish's Butler
    • (as Sid Crossley)
    Martha Franklin
    • Mrs. Lesser
    Joe Bordeaux
    • Crook
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Ferike Boros
    Ferike Boros
    • Delancey Street Woman
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Clarence Burton
    Clarence Burton
    • Police Desk Sergeant
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Paul Ellis
    Paul Ellis
    • Crook
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Ruth Feldman
    • Market Woman
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Otto Fries
    • Tradesman
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Julia Swayne Gordon
    Julia Swayne Gordon
    • Mrs. Striker
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Donald Hall
    Donald Hall
    • Minor Role
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Leon Janney
    Leon Janney
    • Eddie Lesser as a Boy
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Julanne Johnston
    Julanne Johnston
    • Irma Striker
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    Virginia Marshall
    • Birdie Goldfish as a Girl
    • (बिना क्रेडिट के)
    • निर्देशक
      • Frank Capra
    • लेखक
      • Fannie Hurst
      • Sonya Levien
      • Howard J. Green
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
    • IMDbPro में प्रोडक्शन, बॉक्स ऑफिस और बहुत कुछ

    उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं13

    6.3413
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    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    7davidmvining

    Well executed melodrama...with SOUND!

    Based on a play by Fannie Hurst, The Younger Generation might be Frank Capra's most personal film up to this point. We've had films that felt like he was just for hire (Submarine and both the Harry Langdon films) and films where he was saying what he wanted to say (pretty much everything else to one degree or another), but this almost feels somewhat autobiographical. Sure, Capra was Italian and not Jewish, but it's about the immigrant experience and the difference between people who came to America as adults and those who were raised on its streets. Well, Capra was raised on those streets and had parents who moved to America as adults (he emigrated from Italy with his family when he was five years old), so this just feels like it should be personal.

    The Goldfish family is living on the East Side of New York City while the mother Tilda (Rosa Rosanova) tries to make a living, the father Julius (Jean Hersholt) makes jokes with his friends on the street corner, little Birdie (Lina Basquette as an adult) makes friends with the boy across the way Eddie (Rex Lease as an adult), and the boy Maurice (Ricardo Cortez as an adult) with a real drive for business. When Maruice gets into a fight with Eddie, Maruice accidentally hits the oil lamp above the stove, sending the apartment up in a blaze, but he's not put out by it. He'll make money from their leftover possessions, setting the stage for him to build an import art empire roughly fifteen years later.

    The core of the film's story is the implied conflict between the younger and older generations, but it's not quite the simplistic battle of the ages that that implies. Instead, it's a conflict of visions that mostly manifests as the dramatic butting of heads between Maurice and Birdie since the brother is obsessed with status and position in his new life while Birdie has kept up her relationship with Eddie to the point that she wants to marry him.

    It's interesting to see the big guy versus little guy dynamic manifest here within a family unit with Maurice becoming the big guy, losing sight of his own humanity, and pushing away everyone else while controlling them with his money, much to the chagrin of everyone else in the family, in particular Julius and Birdie who act like partners in crime. Things turn when Eddie, in a fit of desperation to be good enough for Birdie in Maurice's eyes (I think, this is thin and needs more, to be honest), he helps some local hoods knock off a jewelry story by riding up on the street and singing a song to offer up a distraction. It's a scandal that gets quickly found out, leading to Birdie rededicating her love to him by marrying him and Maurice kicking her out while preventing his parents from knowing that he'd done it.

    Now, I should comment on the fact that this is Capra's first sound film. Well, partial sound film. I don't know the background for sure, but it seems like it was at least mostly filmed, The Jazz Singer came out, and they went back to film four scenes with the new sound technology. The transition from silent to sound is the most interesting period in film, in my opinion, and one measure of a director's ability to adapt to changing circumstances. John Ford failed it with The Black Watch while Ernst Lubitsch passed with flying colors in The Love Parade. Capra falls more towards the Lubitsch side, though being only a part talkie there are limits to what one can say on that front. I just want to note that the four scenes are dialogue heavy scenes (similar to Hitchcock's first effort at sound, Blackmail), but he films it like any competent dialogue scene from the later pre-Code period would be filmed, complete with dialogue cutting into shots with people who aren't talking, helping to blend shots confidently. It's surprisingly well done stuff, and it happens to be in a pretty good story to boot. In terms of part-talkies, it recalled the confident way that William Wyler approached it in The Love Trap.

    Anyway, the film speeds towards its conclusion after the passage of two years with Eddie in jail, Birdie having his child, and Julius reaches a low point in his health without any contact from his beloved daughter because Maurice is tearing up her letters all leading to the kind of warm-hearted resolution that Capra was known for, though this is tinged with some pointed sadness. It's not entirely happy, Maurice's antagonism towards Birdie gets somewhat resolved but he can't be happy, not even with his money. And that points to what has quickly formed to be Capra's running theme: the little guys prioritize things that the big guys don't, but there are things to be learned across that gap.

    It's not a great film, perhaps more interesting for Capra's first foray into sound more than anything else, but it's a solidly entertaining little melodrama that never elevates the material but executes it with some skill.
    Michael_Elliott

    Nice Early Capra

    Younger Generation, The (1929)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Early Capra melodrama has poor Jewish family taken out of the ghetto by their youngest son (Ricardo Cortez) who strikes it big. He moves his father (Jean Hersholt), mother (Rosa Rosanova) and sister (Lina Basquette) into a large house and expects them to do what he says and stay away from the "filth" they grew up around. Soon the three start to realize that money can't buy happiness but will the son learn this before it's too late? At this point in time Columbia was still a very small studio so they couldn't afford to go all in in terms of sound movies so this is another example of a silent with a few sound segments scattered throughout the film. I've always found this to be incredibly distracting but I think Capra does a great job at when to use the sound and I also think the quality of the recorded words is among the best I've heard from this era. Considering how poor the studio was it's rather shocking that some of the other studios early talkies didn't come off sounding better. With that said, there are some major problems with the film but for the most part it's a nice time filler that fans of the director will want to check out. The biggest problem is that even in 1929 this material was way too predictable. There's really not a single thing that happens in the film that you won't see coming from a mile away. The format pretty much follows every morality film that came before it and I just wish at some point Capra would have shaken things up just to keep us off guard or at least in some drama. It should come as no shock that Capra does a great job with what's here and manages to keep the film moving quite fast and he keeps it as entertaining as the screenplay will allow. The cast also keeps things moving nicely with their fine performances. Cortez would play this type of role countless times in his career and he always managed to do good with it. Hersholt clearly steals the film as the tortured father. In the end, this isn't the greatest film ever made but I think Capra did the most he could considering what he had to work with. I think those who like to search out these early talkies will find the quality here to be above average and will make one wonder why some of the bigger studios didn't have their stuff sounding as good.
    6marcslope

    Capra with kreplach

    A young Frank Capra slips easily into a milieu you wouldn't expect him to have much feel for--the Jewish Lower East Side--in this early talkie, adapted from a Fannie Hurst novel. Hurst wrote soap operas that validated the feelings of the common woman, but here she's more intent on portraying immigrant Jews, a subculture most of America probably knew and thought little about, with dignity and empathy. And the histrionics are effective. Capra always had a way with actors, and he helps Jean Hersholt, as the stuck-in-his-ways paterfamilias, and Lina Basquette, as a feisty but sympathetic daughter, to their best performances. Ricardo Cortez is more of a natural as the son than you think--he was born Jake Krantz. The early-talkie format, with some scenes with dialogue and others with titles and sound effects, is awkward--if we can hear footsteps and doors slamming, why can't we hear dialogue?--and the not-too-happy ending, with the son punished for his acquisitiveness, is a bit of a downer. But it's loaded with atmosphere, and shows Capra learning his trade quickly.
    jimjo1216

    Silent/Talkie Hybrid from Frank Capra

    THE YOUNGER GENERATION (1929) starts as a silent film, complete with synchronized audio track (for music and sound effects), but eventually lapses into an early talkie with spoken dialogue. The scenes alternate between silent and sound throughout the duration of the film. It's an interesting curiosity for film history buffs, as the movie was released at seemingly the exact moment when Hollywood transitioned from silent cinema to talking pictures.

    The story is nothing groundbreaking. The Goldfish family rises from the cultural melting pot of the Lower East Side to Fifth Avenue high society, thanks to son Morris (Ricardo Cortez), a shrewd businessman who grows the family furniture store into a successful antiques emporium.

    Morris rules his family with an iron fist, forbidding his sister Birdie (Lina Basquette) from seeing her childhood sweetheart from the old neighborhood. The ritzy Fifth Avenue lifestyle stifles Papa Goldfish (Jean Hersholt), who misses his friends from Delancey Street. Morris even legally changes his surname from Goldfish to the less-Jewish "Fish" in order to distance himself from his family's ethnic heritage.

    As an early talkie, many of the line readings are a bit awkward, though Basquette handles the dialogue better than the rest of the cast (even Cortez). But even with her naturalistic delivery, the lines are often written awkwardly.

    Still, the human drama pulls at your heart. Financial success brings misery to the Goldfish family. Morris is a real jerk, and everyone else in his house suffers as he climbs the social ladder. Cut off from her family, Birdie stitches together a happy little life with her songwriter husband, while Morris obsesses over his social position and leads an ultimately empty existence. Lina Basquette is pretty cute as Birdie and Jean Hersholt's performance is heartbreaking.
    7SnoopyStyle

    early Frank Capra

    Morris Goldfish grew up on New York's poor Lower East Side with his Jewish family. His father is a fun loving guy with all his friends but they don't have much money. The kids accidentally burn down their home but Morris fights to save their valuables. He uses the same tenacity to be a successful business and moves the family to rich Fifth Avenue. His father is tired of the stuffy social climbing from Morris and not happy being no longer the head of the household while mother and sister Birdie are overjoyed with their rise in status. Morris changes him name from Goldfish to Fish.

    This is my earliest Frank Capra film. It is silent except for some synchronized music and some talking sequences. It's always fascinating to see incremental advancements in technology. This mix of silent and sound is a real platypus. It actually affects the tone and the style of the movie. Of course, all of that is beyond the filmmaker's intention. It's just the sense from a modern viewer.

    The father son relationship is pure Capra. It's a familiar Capra theme of money don't buy you happiness. I love the path that the movie is going on until Birdie and her boyfriend become the nexus of the plot in the middle. It's too much. Quite frankly, Morris can simply kick Birdie out for marrying poor. The whole crime is contrived. The movie does go back to the father son relationship which is a good thing. The big climatic moment in the lobby is both effective and flawed. There needs to be something more obvious for Morris to deny his parents. In the movie, he's already suppose to introduce his parents to the upper crust guests during the dinner. It needs an extra push. It needs his guest to say something derogatory about them being poor. It's a great moment but it needs a better reason for Morris. Overall, the movie gets a bit too melodramatic. This is a great film for Capra fans and they would be very familiar with the theme.

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    कहानी

    बदलाव करें

    क्या आपको पता है

    बदलाव करें
    • ट्रिविया
      First part-dialog sound film for Columbia Pictures and director Frank Capra. Both wanted to make an all-talking film, but equipped sound stages were at a premium at the time.
    • गूफ़
      When Birdie tells Eddie (via intertitle) that his song has been sold for $1000, he excitedly mouths the words "Five thousand?"
    • भाव

      Title Card: New York's Lower East Side--a melting pot, where the younger generation struggles to free itself from the old-world ideas of its fathers.

    • कनेक्शन
      Featured in Frank Capra's American Dream (1997)

    टॉप पसंद

    रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
    साइन इन करें

    विवरण

    बदलाव करें
    • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
      • 4 मार्च 1929 (यूनाइटेड स्टेट्स)
    • कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
      • यूनाइटेड स्टेट्स
    • भाषा
      • अंग्रेज़ी
    • इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
      • Mlada generacija
    • फ़िल्माने की जगहें
      • Columbia/Sunset Gower Studios - 1438 N. Gower Street, हॉलीवुड, लॉस एंजेल्स, कैलिफोर्निया, संयुक्त राज्य अमेरिका(Studio)
    • उत्पादन कंपनी
      • Columbia Pictures
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    Ricardo Cortez, Lina Basquette, and Jean Hersholt in The Younger Generation (1929)
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    By what name was The Younger Generation (1929) officially released in India in English?
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