These are the Films of the first suitable Movie-Star, Miss Joan Crawford. I cannot wait for this DVD situation, because it will include some of Joan’s best movies!! And, the movies in this boxed station include Joan at her most dazzling! “Sadie McKee” is absolutely my current movie, ever. Joan looks so dazzling in this 1934 MGM classic. I first saw this movie 5 years ago when TCM did a month-long Joan Crawford marathon; this was the first movie I ever saw with Miss Crawford and since then I became a sizable fan and completely fell in worship with this kind, heavenly and very talented actress! I also absolutely worship “Exclusive Cargo.” This is one of Joan’s best pictures with her number-one leading man, Clark Gable; and as far as I’m aware it is the only movie she ever made with Mr. Gable where she took second billing! After you idea these movies you will glance why Miss Crawford was the hardest working woman in Hollywood!
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2! Click Here
Isn’t the portray on the veil of this space really lovely! Below is a list of each movie included in this status, all movies are shown in pan and scan except for “Torch Song” which is in widescreen. (Scroll down, to recognize a list of each one of the special features included, as well)
Sadie McKee (May 9, 1934) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 90 mins.
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2! Click Here
(Joan played: Sadie McKee Brennan)
Color/BW: Shadowy and White
Brief Synopsis:
A working girl suffers through three unnerved relationships on her road to prosperity.
What Miss Crawford had to say about this movie: Everything about “Sadie McKee” was accurate – Gene Raymond, Franchot Tone, the script, Clarence Brown’s direction, Adrian’s customs, the works.
Strange Cargo (March 1, 1940) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 111 mins.
Color/BW: Sad and White
(Joan played: Julie)
Brief Synopsis:
Devil’s Island escapees are changed forever by a prisoner who thinks he’s Jesus.
What Miss Crawford said about her last portray with Clark Gable: Two absolutely astounding films and so different (also discussing “Susan and God”) It’s a shame I couldn’t have retired suitable then, and near serve to do “Mildred Pierce.” Clark and I did our best work together in “Irregular Cargo.” We had always been cessation, sometimes too discontinuance, but now we knew each other as extinct persons and the chemistry was aloof there and it added to the fire.
A Woman’s Face (May 14, 1941) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 105 mins.
Color/BW: Shadowy and White
(Joan played: Anna Holm aka Ingrid Paulson)
Brief Synopsis:
Plastic surgery gives a scarred female criminal a modern outlook on life.
This is what Miss Crawford says about this picture: I have nothing but the best to say for “A Woman’s Face.” It was a glorious script and George(George Cukor, the director) let me hasten with it. I finally fearful both the critics and the public into realizing the fact that I was, at heart, a dramatic actress. Substantial thanks to Melvyn Douglas; I judge he is one of the least-appreciated actors the conceal has ever stale.
Flamingo Road (May 6, 1949) (Studio: Warners)
Runtime Listing: 94 mins
Color/BW: Dismal and White
(Joan played: Lane Bellamy Reynolds)
Brief Synopsis:
A stranded carnival dancer takes on a putrid political boss when she marries.
Here are Miss Crawford’s comments on this film: …This script missed, Curtiz (the director) missed, I missed. I unprejudiced didn’t jell, that’s all, and it’s another time when my judgment screwed up completely, because we were shooting it I plan it would be generous.
Torch Song (October 23, 1953) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 90 mins.
Color/BW: Color (MetroColor aka EastmanColor)
(Joan played: Jenny Stewart)
Brief Synopsis:
Musical comedy story Jenny Stewart, who has been hardened by the worst life has to offer, finds romance when blinded war-veteran Tye Graham becomes her novel piano accompanist.
Miss Crawford’s comments on this movie: …Abet at Metro, after all those years… it was like a homecoming, and half the people on the dwelling, the prop men and the grips…. they remembered me and I remembered them. I loved doing that film. It gave me a chance to dance again, to pretend to notify, to emote all over the area and in color yet! (Note: This is Miss Crawford’s first staring role in a major motion report that is entirely in color!) If I hadn’t brought it off I’d only have myself to blame because all the elements were there.
This boxed situation also includes a lot of special features, many of which I enjoyed very remarkable. I especially got a kick out of Joan’s “Torch Song” recording sessions! And, I enjoyed Joan’s rendition of “Flamingo Road” very distinguished because this is one of her first radio performances that I have heard and it also included a brief interview afterwards!
Sadie Mckee Special Features:
Goofy Movies Number Four (1934) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime listing: 9 mins.
Color/BW: Shaded and White
Brief Synopsis:
This is an MGM short which contains feature stories with amusing commentary.
“Contented Harmonies” “Toyland Broadcast” (December 22, 1934) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime listing: 6 mins.
Color/BW: Color (Technicolor)
Brief Synopsis:
This is an MGM short of an curious cartoon. The toys exhibit a musical revue on their occupy radio state.
Sadie McKee Trailer (1934) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 2 mins.
Color/BW: Sunless and White
Strange Cargo Special Features:
Crawford & Gable
Runtime Listing: 14 mins.
More About Nostradamus (January 18, 1941) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 10 mins.
Color/BW: Dusky and White
Brief Synopsis:
This is an MGM short which includes a brief biography about Nostradamus and highlights some of his accomplishments.
Strange Cargo Trailer (1940) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 2 mins.
Color/BW: Dusky and White
A Woman’s Face Special Features:
You Can’t Fool A Camera (May 1941) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 10
Color/BW: Gloomy and White
Brief Synopsis:
This short starts out with a dramatization in a documentary-format. Then it ends showing some of the stars of the time with a salute to the actors who have entered the armed forces.
Note: On the disc it is subtlitled as “A Unusual Romance of Celluloid,” however I did not spy this anywhere on the short.
Little Cesario (August 30, 1941) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 7 mins.
Color/BW: Color (Technicolor)
Brief Synopsis:
This is an inspiring MGM short.
Screen Guild Playhouse (April 19, 1942)
Runtime Listing: 30 mins.
Color/BW: N/A
Brief Synopsis:
Bette Davis gives a radio performance of “A Woman’s Face.” This is only an audio recording.
Note: This can not be rapid forwarded.
Also Note: While this is playing, the cover unbiased includes the “A Woman’s Face” special features menu up.
Lux Radio Theater (November 2, 1942)
Runtime Listing: 57 mins.
Color/BW: N/A
Brief Synopsis:
Ida Lapino gives a radio performance of “A Woman’s Face.” This is only an audio recording.
Note: This can not be rapid forwarded.
Also Note: While this is playing, the veil objective includes the “A Woman’s Face” special features menu up.
A Woman’s Face Trailer (1941) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 3 mins.
Color/BW: Dim and White
Flamingo Road Special Features:
Crawford at Warners
Runtime Listing: 12 mins.
Curtain Razor (May 21, 1941) (Studio: Warners)
Runtime Listing: 7 mins.
Color/BW: Color (Technicolor)
Brief Synopsis:
This is a Warners short/cartoon that features Porky Pig as a talent scout.
Screen Director’s Playhouse (May 26, 1950)
Runtime Listing: 25 mins.
Color/BW: N/A
(Joan played: Lane Bellamy Reynolds)
Brief Synopsis:
Joan gives us a very special treat when she reprises her critically acclaimed role from “Flamingo Road” for radio! Joan’s radio performance comes in at 22 minutes and afterwards there is a brief interview with Joan and the director, Michael Cortiz.
Note: This can not be rapidly forwarded.
Also Note: While this is playing, the veil honest includes the “Flamingo Road” special features menu up.
Flamingo Road Trailer (1949) (Studio: Warners)
Runtime Listing: 2 mins.
Torch Song Special Features:
Tough Baby: Torch Song
Runtime Listing: 12 mins.
TV of Tomorrow (June 6, 1953) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 7 mins.
Color/BW: Color (Technicolor)
Brief Synopsis:
This is an MGM short which discusses television viewing “of tomorrow” in a very comic intention.
Jimmy Fund Public Service Announcement (1953) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 3 mins.
Color/BW: Shaded and White
(Joan played: herself in a public service message)
Brief Synopsis:
This is a commercial that Joan made which was shown before her movie, “Torch Song.” Many fans, including myself have seen this scarcely-seen commercial, but this includes the entire announcement in its entirety!
Unreleased Torch Song Recording Sessions/Rehearsals (1953) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 31 mins.
Color/BW: N/A
(Joan played: more or less the character of Jenny Stewart)
Brief Synopsis:
This includes incredibly-rare, uncut audio clips of Joan singing for “Torch Song.”
Note: This can not be mercurial forwarded.
Also Note: While this is playing, the shroud unbiased includes the “Torch Song” special features menu up.
Torch Song Trailer (1953) (Studio: MGM)
Runtime Listing: 3 mins.
Why was Miss Crawford such a attractive and unconventional star…?
Miss Crawford was a satisfactory star, who worked her a-s-s off to pick up to where she was! And, do you know what she did once she got there? She worked 10 times harder…! Joan had the longest and most impressive film career of any star during Tinseltown’s famous Golden Age of Cinema! Joan’s career lasted 5 decades! And her career proved to be more exact to her than any lover or husband! Miss Crawford was always known for her fashion-sense, classical beauty and the ability to constantly re-invent herself (half a century before the Material Girl was a household name!)
Joan Crawford started her career in 1925 as a flapper, playing in bit parts as a contract-player for the most comely studio in town, MGM. She was nothing more than a glorified prop, unbilled in her first film, “Lady of the Night.” Soon, Joan was promoted to leading-lady, appearing in such critically-acclaimed pictures as, Harry Langdon’s Tramp Tramp Tramp, and Lon Chaney’s The Unknown. But it wasn’t until Joan approved the role of Diana Medford, in Our Dancing Daughters that she became a bona fide star! By the extinguish of the decade Joan had more than 20 pictures under her belt!
In the 30′s when many tranquil stars were bowing out gracefully, Joan was encourage with a vengeance! This time Joan was the petite shop girl that Depression-Era American ladies (and maybe even some boys, too) could really identify with. Miss Crawford could be seen acting in such renowned movies as, “Letty Lynton,” Rain, Stout Hotel, and one of my personal favorites, Forsaking All Others (1934) . Some of the 25 classics that Joan also made during the 30′s include: Dancing Lady, Laughing Sinners, Dance, Fools, Dance (Forbidden Hollywood), Chained, “No More Ladies,” Shapely Hussy, Like on the Rush (1936), The Bride Wore Red, Mannequin (1938) and of course one of her most current ever, The Women!
“No more goddamn shop girls,” Joan was once quoted as saying to MGM chief-honcho, Louis B. Mayer. In the 40′s Joan yet again came help in another one of her many incarnations, this time as the society matron in such movies as, When Ladies Meet, Reunion in France and Above Suspicion (1943) . In 1942 Miss Crawford donated her entire salary from Columbia’s They All Kissed the Bride to the war-effort and then she turned around and fired her agent when he didn’t do the same! After 18 years of being a member of the MGM family, Miss Crawford took a gargantuan gamble and decided to branch out, this time working for the actor’s studio, Warners. Joan’s first film for Warners, was her most distinguished movie, and it garnered her the Oscar for Best Actress; playing the title role in her defining-film, Mildred Pierce . Joan also made a slew other superior pictures during this period, such as: Humoresque and Daisy Kenyon . Appealing to Warners really paid off for Miss Crawford, because she also received her second Academy Award nomination for Possessed, playing the harried Louise Howell! Of course, Miss Crawford had all the time in the world for our servicemen. Joan was often seen at the Hollywood Canteen enchanting our boys; …how many of today’s movie stars accumulate off their pedestals to do this?
The 50′s marked a very pivotal time in Joan’s eminent career. Because in the next chapter of her narrate resume, she played the certain and strong matriarch in many improbable dramatic cinematic masterpieces. Such as, Harriet Craig, Queen Bee, “Female on the Beach,” The Damned Don’t Bawl, “Goodbye My Admire,” Tale of Esther Costello and Autumn Leaves. Miss Crawford also received her third Academy Award nomination playing Myra Hudson in RKO’s Sudden Scare. And never one to be typecast, Joan made a colossal splash in Johnny Guitar, portraying a tough saloon owner in the wild-west! Also beginning in the 50′s, Joan took up the campaign as official spokeswoman for Pepsi-Cola; a coveted role that she enjoyed for more than 18 years!
In the 60′s Miss Crawford didn’t listless down for a second! Nope! She came out swinging. Joan made the whole country ask in droves, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? . In one of her most noted pictures ever, Joan played Blanche Hudson, opposite another very talented actress, Ms. Davis, in this pleasing Warners film! Throughout all the 60′s Joan was known as the “Wail Queen.” She stared in such cult-favorites as, Strait-Jacket, Della, I Saw What You Did and Berserk!! It was also around this time, that Miss Crawford penned her autobiography, A Portrait of Joan Crawford.
Even in semi-retirement, Miss Crawford level-headed always kept busy during the 1970′s. This time she was the Hollywood Anecdote, and everyone knew it! When the movie studios weren’t knocking on her door, she switched to television. In one of her last television appearances, Miss Crawford played the piece of Joan Fairchild in ABC’s “The Sixth Sense: Dear Joan: We’re Going to Apprehension You to Death.” She also wrote her second book, the best-selling My Draw of Life. And, Joan always found the time for some of her accepted charities; donating her talent and time to The Muscular Dystrophy Association and The American Cancer Society. Of course, Joan also made time to notify to her splendid friend and journalist Roy Newquist. Mr. Newquist was actually the only journalist that Miss Crawford chose to declare to during the behind 70′s, and his thoughtful (and unprecedented) interviews with Joan were published in the 1980 book, Conversations with Joan Crawford.
Miss Crawford perished a second time when the majority of the public threw her away and vilified her as a lunatic. But this death was grand more painful. Because not only were Joan’s films forgotten, but all of the marvelous she did during her lifetime was also completely erased! The proper Joan Crawford was kind, compassionate and marvelous to a fault. Joan was a self-made lady who worked for everything she got. She objective wanted to sustain her head above water in a man’s world where women didn’t have a converse or a choice. Miss Crawford never for a second forgot where she came from or who she was, and she never for a moment let her beloved fans down! All Joan wanted was for someone to give her a chance and hold in her. I really am so jubilant that this dwelling is coming out because maybe now the public can stare the right Joan Crawford and remember her as she truly was!
This is the long awaited second volume of the Joan Crawford Collection. Joan had a very long career in films spanning from the restful era and MGM into the 1970′s. She was one of the few actresses to successfully form the transition from silents to sound, and this position gives you a sampling of her roles from 1934 to 1953. The following are the five films in this location and their extra features:
Sadie McKee (1934)
One of the last precodes, this film is a melodrama that has Joan Crawford playing a totally virtuous character throughout. She’s a maid who is fired for telling off the head of the household (Franchot Tone) . Next, her boyfriend deserts her for a chorus girl. She ends up marrying an alcoholic millionaire strictly as a matter of survival, but she does aid her husband cure himself of his alcoholism. Afterwards she asks for a divorce so she can go glimpse for her extinct boyfriend, who is now alone and quite ill. This movie introduced the song “All I Do is Dream of You” by Arthur Freed and Nacio Herb Brown.
DVD Special Features: (waiting confirmation from Michael Crawford)
Vintage comedy short Goofy Movies #4
Classic cartoon Toyland Broadcast
Theatrical trailer
Strange Cargo (1940)
Andre (Clark Gable) is a convict in a French penal colony in South America. The first time he tries to run saloon girl Julie (Joan Crawford) turns him in. His second attempt is successful, and this time he throws in his lot with several other escapees, one of which seems to always know what is about to happen, and is even able to diagram suitable maps of elope routes. During this speed Andre runs into Julie again. At the conclusion of the race Andre realizes the reason for the one prisoner’s astounding abilities and has a change of heart. A very queer film and a unfamiliar role for Crawford, although I found it enchanting. Directed by Frank Borzage who is distinguished for his fancy stories enthralling crime, loss, and redemption.
DVD Special Features:
New featurette: Gable & Crawford
Vintage short More About Nostradamus
Classic cartoon The Lonesome Stranger
Theatrical Trailer
A Woman’s Face (1941)
One of Joan Crawford’s best performances as a woman whose scarred face embitters her and leads her into a life of crime until a surgeon (Melvin Douglas) decides to operate and win her outer scars. However, her inner scars remain and she finds it hard to change even with the befriend of the kindly doctor. This film initially failed at the box office, but was recognized as a classic years later. Directed by George Cukor.
DVD Special Features:
Vintage Romance of Celluloid Short You Can’t Fool a Camera
Classic cartoon Exiguous Cesario
Two audio-only radio adaptations with Bette Davis and Ida Lupino
Theatrical trailer
Flamingo Road (1949)
Lane Bellamy (Joan Crawford) is a dancer touring with a carnival who falls in admire with Fielding Carlisle. However, a marriage to a carnival dancer is not what Fielding’s political handler, Titus Semple, considers a first-rate proceed for his protege. Thus he has Lane framed and sent to jail and arranges a loveless marriage for Fielding with a girl more appropriate for the future he has planned for him. Once out of jail, Lane falls in admire with and marries another prominent person, but their future together is threatened when Fielding comes to call. Directed by Michael Curtiz.
DVD Special Features:
New featurette: Crawford at Warners
Classic cartoon Curtain Razor
Audio-only radio adaptation with the film’s stars
Theatrical trailer
Torch Song (1953)
This was Joan Crawford’s return vehicle to MGM after having left ten years earlier, and is the weakest of the films in the bunch, but that doesn’t mean it’s unpleasant. Instead it is gigantic fun because it is such a camp classic. Too abominable there’s no commentary, because I would really like to know what went on late the scenes in this one. It has everything – Technicolor, an over-the-top wardrobe for Joan, and of course there’s Joan as a steamroller of a woman that no man can stand up to except a British pianist, blinded in WWII. And then there are the musical numbers – well, you’ll have to spy it for yourself.
DVD Special Features:
New featurette: Tough Baby: Joan Crawford and Torch Song
Audio bonus: Joan Crawford recording session
Public service announcement trailer: At Home with Joan Crawford
Vintage MGM cartoon: TV of Tomorrow
Vintage MGM short
Theatrical trailer
All films B&W and Mono, in 1.37 aspect ratio, except Torch Song, which is Color and 1.77 aspect ratio as originally shown in theaters. The details for the extra features reach from a press release from Warner Home Video. This situation is currently scheduled for release on February 12.
Total Gym