Monday, January 25, 2016

Best Pictures #3: 1927-28 (1st) Academy Awards, Unique & Artistic Picture* Nominee, The Crowd (1928)

by A.J.

1927-28 (1st) Academy Awards, Unique & Artistic Picture* Nominee
The story of King Vidor’s silent film The Crowd sounds simple and familiar: the joys and tragedies of a married couple as they struggle to get by in the modern world. However, a movie like this, with such subject matter and of such quality, is a rare thing even today. This film was a passion project for Vidor. Irving Thalberg, head of production at MGM, believed that occasionally films should be made for prestige instead of profit, and since Vidor had directed many hits for MGM, Thalberg greenlit The Crowd.

The Crowd is a film in two parts. The first half is an optimistic romantic comedy. John Simms grows up believing and telling everyone that he is destined for great things. As a young adult, he moves to New York City. He has a job in a skyscraper and meets Mary on a double date. They quickly fall in love and things are great, for a while. We expect a bright future for John and Mary, just like they do; one filled with happy times and easy to solve problems. The second half of the movie is a heavy drama about married life. John and Mary are befallen by small troubles like broken appliances, unfriendly in-laws, and a frustrating day at the beach followed by larger troubles like a lost job, money problems, and a painful tragedy. John’s daydreams and Mary’s pragmatism are an ill match for each other and strain their marriage more and more.
When John arrived in New York harbor, a fellow traveler told him, “You’ve got to be good in that town if you want to beat the crowd.” To our main characters “the crowd” is every other faceless person in the city equally uninterested and unhelpful in their lives and problems. The only help John can hope to get is from himself, something he is painfully slow to realize. John is, of course, as much a part of “the crowd” as he is apart from it; every average person is the main character of their own life, unbeknownst to anyone else.

MGM studio head Louis B. Mayer thought The Crowd was depressing and “obscene” because of a scene that shows a toilet as John tries to fix the tank. Mayer hated this film and urged fellow Academy judges to vote against it. I cannot deny that The Crowd is a depressing film, but it is also an extraordinary one. It is a film of major defeats and small victories. It is not a spoiler to say that the film has a bittersweet ending. Not every problem is solved, but the characters are happy and smiling. Seven different endings were shot for The Crowd. Louis B. Mayer wanted the film to end at Christmas with John and Mary and their children living in a mansion; an ending that would have been wildly out of place and too absurdly positive to be meaningful. I cannot think of a more positive ending that still remains true to the film than the one used. There are only a few other films I can think of that feel as true to the simultaneously harsh and beautiful nature of everyday life.
King Vidor received a well-deserved nomination for Best Director, Dramatic Picture (there was also a Best Director, Comedy category). The Crowd is shot with such skill that it is clear the filmmakers are not only masters of their craft but also creative and inventive minds. In the most famous shot of the film, indeed one of the most famous shots in cinema, the camera pans up a monolithic skyscraper then dissolves to inside and glides over a sea of uniform and anonymous desks aligned in perfect rows before finally pushing in on the desk of John Simms #137. It is a truly beautiful piece of cinema and has been repeated in homage, albeit on a smaller scale, in Billy Wilder’s The Apartment (1960) and Cameron Crowe’s Jerry Maguire (1996). There are number of other visually interesting shots in The Crowd. On John and Mary’s date at Coney Island we see them and their friends slide down a big slide right towards the camera. The production design of the city is impressive and captivating. It is plain and void of character, but seems vast, futuristic, and imposing; it reminded me of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, also from 1927.
The Crowd is a rare kind of film which is powerful and moving while also entertaining. It is loaded with pathos and catharsis for audiences yesterday and today. The Crowd does all of this while being artistic, inventive, and thematically challenging. The Crowd is unfortunately a hard film to track down. It was never issued on DVD and is only available on VHS. However, there is hope for the preservation of this movie. It was one of the first films selected for preservation in the U.S. National Film Registry by the Library of Congress. A most wise choice.

Nominee: MGM
Producer: Irving Thalberg
Director: King Vidor
Screenplay: King Vidor & John V.A. Weaver
Cast: Eleanor Boardman, James Murray, Bert Roach
Release Date: February 18th, 1928
Total Nominations: 2, including Best Unique & Artistic Picture
Other Nominations: Director, Dramatic Picture- King Vidor

*The 1st Academy Awards had two categories for Best Picture: Unique & Artistic Picture and Outstanding Picture. The Outstanding Picture category is widely considered to be the forerunner to Best Picture since the Unique & Artistic Picture category was discontinued the following year. Since at the time each category was thought of as equally the top award I have included the Unique & Artistic Picture nominees as Best Picture nominees.

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