The Wet Parade (1932)
The Wet Parade has a very powerful message, and at a full two hours, it’s one of the longest movies to ever come out of the 1930s. The film chronicles the use of alcohol in the United States before Prohibition, and the effects of the law in its early years.
Starting out in the South, the film shows how alcoholism can devastate a family and ruin lives. Lewis Stone is the patriarch, and he gives a rare performance full of emotional turmoil. This pre-Code film shows what other films wouldn’t be able to show for decades. Lew is taking a buggy ride with his daughter, Dorothy Jordan, and he’s so drunk, he has to pull over and vomit in the bushes.
With an unhappy end to that part of the story, we the see the attitudes of Lew’s children, Dorothy and Neil Hamilton. Dorothy vows to never touch a drop and wishes alcohol would be taken away from the entire country, but Neil discovers the euphoric feeling and develops a habit of his own. Up in the North, Neil is living in a hotel run by Robert Young and his parents, Walter Huston and Clara Blandick. Walter is also a drunkard, and much to his horror, the newspapers announce the possibility of Prohibition. Robert, Clara, and Dorothy are ecstatic at the prospect of no one being able to drink alcohol anymore, but it doesn’t occur to them that people will break the law and continue to drink.
This movie is such a heavy drama, I must caution you before you rent it. Regardless of your views on alcohol, it’s pretty upsetting to watch. If you think alcohol is the root of all evil, or if you think it’s the men who abuse it who are the villains, or if you think Prohibition was a terrible mistake—there’s a message in this movie for everyone. Two scenes stand out in my mind as being particularly moving, and I’m sure other people with different perspectives will have their own favorites. One scene shows the last day before Prohibition, and shop owners sell off their last cases of alcohol to droves of customers. In the evening, people don black arm bands and sing "Auld Lang Syne" at midnight after a tearful countdown to the last legal drop of liquor. Another scene shortly afterwards shows how one bootlegging organization makes black market alcohol; the sequence that runs without a single word of dialogue is chilling.
The film flows beautifully from one person’s story to the next, connecting them but still keeping them separate so the audience can see how the problem permeates different families. Robert Young isn’t even in the start of the film, but he ends up being the lead of the story. Fans of his television career need to rent this movie to see him give a once-in-a-lifetime dramatic performance. He’s different in this film from any others he made, and he pours his heart out scene after scene.
Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to violence and adult themes, I wouldn’t let my kids watch it.
Want to watch it? Click here to watch it on ok.ru. And thanks "Classic Movies Kristine Rose" for posting!
More Walter Huston movies here!
More Myrna Loy movies here!
More Lewis Stone movies here!
More Robert Young movies here!
Starting out in the South, the film shows how alcoholism can devastate a family and ruin lives. Lewis Stone is the patriarch, and he gives a rare performance full of emotional turmoil. This pre-Code film shows what other films wouldn’t be able to show for decades. Lew is taking a buggy ride with his daughter, Dorothy Jordan, and he’s so drunk, he has to pull over and vomit in the bushes.
With an unhappy end to that part of the story, we the see the attitudes of Lew’s children, Dorothy and Neil Hamilton. Dorothy vows to never touch a drop and wishes alcohol would be taken away from the entire country, but Neil discovers the euphoric feeling and develops a habit of his own. Up in the North, Neil is living in a hotel run by Robert Young and his parents, Walter Huston and Clara Blandick. Walter is also a drunkard, and much to his horror, the newspapers announce the possibility of Prohibition. Robert, Clara, and Dorothy are ecstatic at the prospect of no one being able to drink alcohol anymore, but it doesn’t occur to them that people will break the law and continue to drink.
This movie is such a heavy drama, I must caution you before you rent it. Regardless of your views on alcohol, it’s pretty upsetting to watch. If you think alcohol is the root of all evil, or if you think it’s the men who abuse it who are the villains, or if you think Prohibition was a terrible mistake—there’s a message in this movie for everyone. Two scenes stand out in my mind as being particularly moving, and I’m sure other people with different perspectives will have their own favorites. One scene shows the last day before Prohibition, and shop owners sell off their last cases of alcohol to droves of customers. In the evening, people don black arm bands and sing "Auld Lang Syne" at midnight after a tearful countdown to the last legal drop of liquor. Another scene shortly afterwards shows how one bootlegging organization makes black market alcohol; the sequence that runs without a single word of dialogue is chilling.
The film flows beautifully from one person’s story to the next, connecting them but still keeping them separate so the audience can see how the problem permeates different families. Robert Young isn’t even in the start of the film, but he ends up being the lead of the story. Fans of his television career need to rent this movie to see him give a once-in-a-lifetime dramatic performance. He’s different in this film from any others he made, and he pours his heart out scene after scene.
Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to violence and adult themes, I wouldn’t let my kids watch it.
Want to watch it? Click here to watch it on ok.ru. And thanks "Classic Movies Kristine Rose" for posting!
More Walter Huston movies here!
More Myrna Loy movies here!
More Lewis Stone movies here!
More Robert Young movies here!
Hot Toasty Rag Nominations:
Best Picture of 1932
Best Director: Victor Fleming
Best Actor: Robert Young
Best Picture of 1932
Best Director: Victor Fleming
Best Actor: Robert Young