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Solitude

Original title: Lonesome
  • 1928
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 9m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Barbara Kent and Glenn Tryon in Solitude (1928)
Trailer for Lonesome
Play trailer1:27
2 Videos
44 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

Two lonely people in the big city meet and enjoy the thrills of an amusement park, only to lose each other in the crowd after spending a great day together. Will they ever see each other aga... Read allTwo lonely people in the big city meet and enjoy the thrills of an amusement park, only to lose each other in the crowd after spending a great day together. Will they ever see each other again?Two lonely people in the big city meet and enjoy the thrills of an amusement park, only to lose each other in the crowd after spending a great day together. Will they ever see each other again?

  • Director
    • Pál Fejös
  • Writers
    • Mann Page
    • Edward T. Lowe Jr.
    • Tom Reed
  • Stars
    • Barbara Kent
    • Glenn Tryon
    • Fay Holderness
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pál Fejös
    • Writers
      • Mann Page
      • Edward T. Lowe Jr.
      • Tom Reed
    • Stars
      • Barbara Kent
      • Glenn Tryon
      • Fay Holderness
    • 26User reviews
    • 41Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos2

    Lonesome
    Trailer 1:27
    Lonesome
    Lonesome: The Criterion Collection
    Trailer 1:27
    Lonesome: The Criterion Collection
    Lonesome: The Criterion Collection
    Trailer 1:27
    Lonesome: The Criterion Collection

    Photos44

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    + 38
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    Top cast12

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    Barbara Kent
    Barbara Kent
    • Mary
    Glenn Tryon
    Glenn Tryon
    • Jim
    Fay Holderness
    • Overdressed Woman
    Gusztáv Pártos
    • Romantic Gentleman
    • (as Gustav Partos)
    Eddie Phillips
    Eddie Phillips
    • The Sport
    Andy Devine
    Andy Devine
    • Jim's Friend
    Henry Armetta
    Henry Armetta
    • Ferris wheel guy
    • (uncredited)
    Edgar Dearing
    Edgar Dearing
    • Cop
    • (uncredited)
    Louise Emmons
    Louise Emmons
    • Telephone Caller
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Esmelton
    Fred Esmelton
    • Swami
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Raymond
    • Barker
    • (uncredited)
    Churchill Ross
    Churchill Ross
    • Telephone Caller
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Pál Fejös
    • Writers
      • Mann Page
      • Edward T. Lowe Jr.
      • Tom Reed
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    7.72.8K
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    Featured reviews

    10Varlaam

    A lost masterpiece?

    This film is outstanding.

    A man and woman leave their respective rented rooms for work. He's a "punch presser"; she's a switchboard operator. After work, neither one feels up to joining friends; they just feel too ... single. But they both head to Coney Island. They meet, fall in love, get separated, return home distressed. A plot that simple, even clichéd, does not appear to hold much promise.

    But the energy! The pacing is so frenetic. There's constant movement on camera, clocks ticking, crowds scurrying, throngs crushing, machines stamping, carnivals, streamers, roller coaster rides. Moments of relative calm come when the lovers are together.

    The thrilling impersonality of the urban maelstrom has hardly been better depicted. I came away thinking it was one of the best things I've seen.

    If you've seen "The Devil and Miss Jones", the Jean Arthur / Robert Cummings comedy from 1941, then you can't help but remember the Coney Island beach scene where everyone is packed in together with barely room to move.

    Well, this film has a scene just like that one. In fact, the greater part of the film is that way. You're never so alone as when you're in a crowd. These scenes are funny, but they do make their point.

    I saw a restored print of "Solitude" (as it was titled) with colour tinting and three sound sequences, courtesy of Cinematheque Ontario. The sound segments are just awful, so typical of the very earliest sound, but perhaps they're a blessing in disguise. The extraordinary quality of the silent film is spotlighted by the awkwardness of these three brief scenes: Jim and Mary on the beach, Jim and Mary near the midway, Jim at the police station.

    The ultimate restoration of this elusive marvel would make the film silent throughout, liberating it from the stylistic cacophony of the stilted sound sequences.

    Neither lead performer, Barbara Kent nor Glenn Tryon, was known to me previously. (Andy Devine is plainly recognizable however.) It seems that Tryon later became the producer of "Hellzapoppin" and "Hold That Ghost". He also holds the only acting credit for a film that anyone at all seems to have seen, "Variety Girl" from 1947. To me, Barbara Kent resembles Paulette Goddard somewhat, while Glenn Tryon looks like a brother to Don DeFore and Bob Cummings.

    The screening I attended was the Toronto première of the restoration. Let's hope it now becomes more widely available.
    artihcus022

    Lonesome is one of the forgotten masterpieces of cinema.,,

    A sister of Sunrise and The Crowd, this film is more emotional and poetic than those landmarks and every bit as great. The plot concerns two working class American types, he works in the factory, she works on the intercom who meet by chance on a fairground and fall in love and then lose each other without knowing where the other lives.

    The film's beginning is to be treasured, it follows in detail the morning ritual of first the girl and then the man in their respective homes. The effect conveyed is the organization and elegance of women over the tardy, rushed, half-baked activities of men. The love story between the two characters is so beautifully etched and played so naturalistically by the actors(Barbara Kent and Glenn Tryon) that the sense of loss in the latter half of the film is all the more painful and heart-breaking. The film deals with a certain truth about living in a city that has remained constant even after a good 80 years. At once a constant sense of community and at other an equally constant sense of loneliness from being in a crowd.
    dbdumonteil

    I'm so alone,so lonely....

    ...that I cannot stand my own company...says the hero.

    This could be the optimistic side of King Vidor's "the crowd".This era was a time when the pursuit of happiness was legitimate and "even with a face like that" you could hope to find the woman of your dreams.Robert Siodmak would make "Menschen Am Sonntag" and Marcel Carné "Nogent Eldorado Du Dimanche" soon after ,and would replace Coney Island by the banks of the Rhine or of the Seine.

    1928 was the year before the crash .Even in the biggest city in the world ,you can be lonelier than the loneliest of creatures.He pretends he is a millionaire ,she pretends she is a princess ;in fact he is a working man,she is an operator .

    It is not as optimistic as it seems at first sight.The crowds are hostile and do nothing to help them ,they are as selfish as today's crowds .

    "Lonesome " is an important movie,if only for its simplicity and its spontaneity.Everything happens in the short space of one day (from the rude awakening to the night when solitude becomes even harder to bear ) and the two principals are really endearing ,almost matching Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell.

    NB:Paul Fejos would continue his career in France in the early thirties where he directed Annabella in a tragic melodrama ("Marie Legende Hongroise")and a remake of Feuillade's "Fantomas", the first third of which surpasses the original .
    8sb88

    A cute, wonderful romance story

    It's a shame Lonesome hasn't been seen more widely by modern audiences. The limited acclaim it's received is well deserved.

    Lonesome is very simple. It's no more than a little romantic movie of two people who fall in love and then appear to lose each other. But the whole thing is told expertly well. The camera moves about freely in many unique and interesting ways. Visually alone, it's quite the spectacle. It also helps that the two in the lead roles are enjoyable.

    Glenn Tyron is good enough in his lead role, but his romantic interest, played by Barbara Kent, is the real star. She is fun and playful when needed, but her soulful eyes convey more pain then most people ever could with their voices. Her charisma is evident from shot one.

    The only downside to the film is the inclusion of a few sound scenes. Clearly done just to cash in on the new craze, it actually only serves to grind the story to a halt. It forces the movie to become stationary, and the dialogue itself is pretty inane.

    I cannot recommend the film strongly enough, though. It's as enjoyable of a romance as you'll ever see. There's nothing too complicated here: just two people falling in love, and it's a joy to see.
    8Philipp_Flersheim

    Interesting at many levels

    There are at least three levels at which 'Lonesome' is an extremely interesting film.

    1. It is a sweet story of two lonely people in a big anonymous city who meet, fall in love and lose each other. The picture is well-acted, and the two lead actors Barbara Kent (Mary) and Glenn Tryon (Jim) are perfectly matched; they both give nuanced and sensitive performances.

    2. The style of the picture is almost documentary, which makes it interesting from a social history point of view. In some ways, nothing much has changed over the last 100 years: People are still commuting to work, the subway in New York was as crowded as the London Underground is today (I don't know about New York in 2022), you get annoyed at the same kind of behaviour of your fellow passengers (e.g. Eating smelly food) etc. Obviously other things have changed: The type of work we do, for example, and we no longer bond over serialised novels published in newspapers that we read. Nevertheless, we are still living in what is recognisably the same kind of society. I found this aspect of 'Lonesome' particularly interesting.

    3. Technologically, 'Lonesome' was highly innovative, being the perfect example of a film that came out during the transition phase from silent pictures to talkies to colour films. Initially, it looks like a normal black and white silent film to which music and some sound effects have been added. However, some scenes have spoken dialogue, and some are even in colour, or at least partly colorised. People back then must have felt they were living in an exciting age of innovation; I am sure they expected that within the next few years, all talking and maybe even all colour films would become the norm.

    So why am I giving 'Lonesome' no more than 8 stars? Well, there are a few flaws. First, the dialogue sounds as stilted as if the actors were reading it from a sheet, and on top of that, a bit of it does not seem to make much sense (the scene at the police). It feels like an afterthought, like something director Pal Fejös inserted after having finished the rest of the film. Second, the colour effects are not particularly nice to look at. The colours are just garish. They were certainly innovative, but the film would look better without them. And finally, the plot is so simple that it barely exists. The only real problem the characters face appears almost at the end of the film, and its resolution does not logically follow from anything that happened earlier; it just comes about by chance. I am reserving 9 stars for pictures that are as good as perfect, and 10 for those that have some particular emotional quality or style that takes them into the small group of my favourite films (like e.g. 'North by Northwest', which for my taste must be one of the most stylish films ever made). 'Lonesome' is very good, but not as good as that. Hence 8 stars.

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      It was one of the first motion pictures to have sound and a couple of talking scenes. It was released in both silent and monaural versions. Some scenes in existing original prints of the film are colored with stencils.
    • Quotes

      Jim: I'm only an ordinary working stiff. And I'm so tired of being alone that I can't even stand my own company.

    • Alternate versions
      Produced in both sound and silent versions. The sound version was 6,785 feet in length, and the silent version was 6,193 feet.
    • Connections
      Featured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: Az amerikai film kezdetei (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Always
      (uncredited)

      Written by Irving Berlin

      [Played by dance orchestra at ballroom]

      Sung by Nick Lucas

      [on Brunswick recording played in last scene]

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 9, 1932 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lonesome
    • Filming locations
      • Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 9m(69 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.19:1

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