A gang of crooks evade the police by moving their operations to a small town. There the gang's leader, John Madison, encounters a faith healer and uses him to scam the gullible public of fun... Read allA gang of crooks evade the police by moving their operations to a small town. There the gang's leader, John Madison, encounters a faith healer and uses him to scam the gullible public of funds for a supposed chapel. But when a real healing takes place, a change comes over the gan... Read allA gang of crooks evade the police by moving their operations to a small town. There the gang's leader, John Madison, encounters a faith healer and uses him to scam the gullible public of funds for a supposed chapel. But when a real healing takes place, a change comes over the gang.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- Harry Evans
- (as Ned A. Sparks)
- Margaret Thornton's Nurse
- (uncredited)
- Chinese Father Who Buys Balloon
- (uncredited)
- Fund Donor
- (uncredited)
- Ticket Buyer
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Tour Guide
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
When the story begins, you see that John 'Doc' Madison (Chester Morris) is the leader of a gang of grifters who steal folks blind. However, after he gets in a fight with Nikko (Boris Karloff), he nearly kills him...and takes it on the lam. He eventually finds himself in a strange small town. Strange because there is no doctor and folks go to a local faith healer, 'The Patriarch', for healing. John gets the idea to exploit this and use it to make a big killing...so he contacts the gang and has them meet him there. However, over time, several gang members come to believe in the power of The Patriarch...and John is having a hard time getting this big score. What's next? Well....it's pretty disappointing!
There are two things I didn't like about the film. The first was minor...Karloff's accent seemed weird. The second one, however, was HUGE....after such a wonderful setup, the ending is a real wimp out...and left me very disappointed. It's a shame, as up until then it was great!
I have not seen the original 1919 version of this film but John Wray, who plays the deformed 'Frog',gives what has to be the performance of his career. He was mostly a character actor and bit player but here generates what ought to have been at least a Supporting Actor award nomination (there were no supporting awards until 1936). And deadpan comic Ned Sparks? here he plays it straight and is very convincing - I can't recall him in a more prominent role. Usually he could be seen in snatches of one picture or another. Sylvia Sidney carries the load in the acting department with a performance that is both sympathetic and heartfelt. Hobart Bosworth plays the Patriarch and has little to do but to gaze heavenward and look enrapt.
I would imagine this film is not for all tastes but if you have a chance it is well worth your while even if you are not religious. I saw this film at a film festival in Rome, N.Y. in 35MM, in a print restored by the UCLA Film Dept. It reinforces my opinion that the only way to see most films is in this format, in which the figures are bigger than life. That is the way movies were meant to be seen.
The Miracle Man in question was called The Patriarch (Hobart Bosworth). He was an old man who lived in the small town of Meadsville and had the power to heal the sick and the crippled by faith. He wasn't an evangelist with a big tent and a big congregation, in fact, he had neither. He was a simple old man who did little else but pray and heal folks.
He was discovered by John 'Doc' Madison (Chester Morris). Doc and his two man and one woman crew were grifters. He, Helen Smith (Sylvia Sidney), The Frog (John Wray), and Harry Evans (Ned A. Sparks) did cons, grifts, and pickpockets throughout San Francisco. When Doc threw a guy down a flight of stairs for spying on Helen he had to skip town. He landed in Meadsville where he heard about the faith healer which gave him a bright idea. He'd bring The Frog up with his bent and crippled act, have him pretend to be healed which would bring people flocking to Meadsville, then fleece all the suckers who'd pay to be healed as well. It was a cinch.
Everything was going swimmingly until Helen, The Frog, and Harry began to have second thoughts. They began to really believe.
I don't know how I feel about "The Miracle Man." On the one hand, it is overly religious with strong implications that a man could heal people with the power of faith. On the other hand, it wasn't about a lying cheat and it had a message about faith and how it can change people. I'm in the middle of these two lines. I believe that faith is powerful, however I don't believe in faith healers even a little bit.
So, had it been about faith changing the lives of thieves and crooks, then I would've been more inclined to it. Since they had to throw in there the sick and the handicapped who walked away from the Patriarch like new, I have my reservations. But even with my reservations I'm more pro than I am con.
Free on Internet Archive.
Did you know
- TriviaTyrone Power Sr. was originally supposed to play the Patriarch, but his untimely death prevented this. Hr was replaced by Hobart Bosworth, This would have marked the film debut of his son, Tyrone Power, Jr., but his father's death precluded that.
- ConnectionsRemake of Le Miracle (1919)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1