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| LONESOME
(director/writer: Paul Fejos; screenwriters: story by
Mann Page/ Edward T. Lowe Jr./Tom
Reed; cinematographer: Gilbert
Warrenton; editor: Frank
Atkinson; cast: Glenn Tryon (Jim),
Barbara Kent (Mary), Andy Devine (Jim's
Friend), Eddie Phillips (The sport on the bus),
Fay Holderness (overdressed woman on roller
coaster), Gustav Partos (Romantic
gentleman on roller coaster); Runtime: 68; MPAA Rating:
NR; producer: Carl Laemmle Jr.;
The Criterion Collection; 1928) "It's perhaps the ultimate film in urban alienation." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Hungarian-born
director Paul Fejos ("Spring Shower"/"Arsene
Lupin's Last Adventure"/"The Black Captain") worked
for a time in Hollywood and was also an explorer,
anthropologist and doctor. This is a restored gem that
was filmed as a silent but contains some awkward
talking conversations. It's perhaps the ultimate film
in urban alienation, much like F.W. Murnau's
masterpiece Sunrise (1927). Fejos shows his love for
the ordinary working class souls who find themselves
alone in the bustling crowded big city of NY (most of
it was actually filmed at the old Santa Monica Pier in
Los Angeles), trapped into living stressful robotic
lives at work and confounded in their leisure time by
the overwhelming pop culture. Jim (Glenn
Tryon) and Mary (Barbara Kent)
are two young adults who live alone in the same
boardinghouse hotel, but never met (very much a city
thing!). They work at different jobs at the same
location, where Mary's a switchboard operator and
factory worker Jim runs a punch press machine. They
take the same packed rush-hour train to work and eat
in the same busy restaurant. On the Fourth of July
weekend, on a Saturday before the holiday, the two
knock-off early in the afternoon and discover their
workmates all have dates leaving them alone. When a
noisy band passing in a van under their hotel windows
advertizing a fun day at the beach seems tempting,
both lonely souls take a bus to Coney Island. They
spot each other on the bus
as attractive prospects and at the beach Jim gets up
enough nerve to introduce himself, and they end up
going for a swim together. He tries to impress her
that he's a swell with a yacht and she plays along
that she's an elite. Soon they both tell their real
occupations and seem relieved they no longer have to
play such games. They stay at night to go to the
lit-up amusement park, where they visit a fortune
teller, take photographs at a booth, he tosses a ball
to win a doll for her, they laugh at themselves in the
fun-house mirror and stroll through the surging
crowded confetti-strewn streets no longer feeling so
lonesome. But they get separated taking the Jack
Rabbit Racer roller coaster ride, and when Mary faints
an oafish policeman won't let Jim near her. When Jim
gets upset, the cop arrests him for resisting arrest.
Meanwhile Mary recovers and can't find Jim. After the
precinct sergeant releases Jim, he returns to the
roller coaster ride but in the crowd can't find his
love. The next morning a despondent Jim is overjoyed
to discover that Mary lives next door and the two
embrace and hold onto to each other for dear life. It's
based on three pages of an idea that Universal let
Fejos have, after he discovered it hidden in their
studio. The story is written by Mann Page,
while the screenplay is turned
in by Edward T. Lowe Jr., Tom Reed and
Fejos. The beauty of the film is in its simple,
sincere and affecting universal lyrical ode to love,
that can make a grim mechanical life bearable for the
sympathetic working stiffs. The
heartwarming film employs many innovative techniques
from color tinting, a roving camera and the
superimposition of effects, plus it mixes the best of
experimental styles from Europe and America. REVIEWED ON 11/2/2012 GRADE: A+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |