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A Wife in Every Room

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In Bringing Up Baby , Cary Grant became the first person to use the word Gay (in its modern sense) in a Hollywood movie. One might hypothesize that by 1938, the film censors were starting to become more permissive about the subtext that was regularly being slipped into films of the era. One would be completely wrong to thusly hypothesize ( to hypothesize thusly ; excuse me). Film censorship in the late 1930s was just as draconian as ever: a year earlier they had insisted that a shot of a  gravestone  be cut from a film because the character in question had committed suicide, and it was "inappropriate" to show her receiving a proper burial. The word gay had only slipped through in Bringing Up Baby because no one at the Hays Office knew what it meant in that context. (I won't tell them if you don't.) Cary Grant certainly knew what it meant, and it's very interesting that he was the one who got to introduce the word to American film audiences. Because Cary Grant, th

Depression/Comedy Act II: The RKO Cinematic Universe

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If you follow any aspect of modern Hollywood (you know, the stuff I don't usually screen at these film nights) you will probably have noticed that there are a few topics which tend to dominate the discussions these days. In between chit-chat about  Star Wars and Game of Thrones and The Walking Dead , you will almost certainly have encountered people talking about the Marvel Cinematic Universe . Everything, it seems, is a "universe" these days. Mark Zuckerberg is currently trying to turn Facebook into a "Metaverse". Godzilla and King Kong have recently been punching each other to death in the latest instalment of what Universal Studios is calling its "Monster-verse" and Captain America, Iron Man, Thor et al inhabit something their fan base likes to call the Marvel Cinematic Universe . In the early days of comic books, superheroes usually travelled alone. Superman of the 1940s was never going to cross paths with Batman or Wonder Woman (except perhaps

Depression vs. Comedy

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As we reach the Easter Break (and the end of Act I of our current film series) this feels like a good opportunity to take stock of our current position. As I'm sure you know by now, I have chosen to call this series Depression. Comedy. The first reason for this is the obvious one: the films I am showing are all comedies released during the Great Depression. But what I hope is becoming clear by now is that these particular comedies were something more than simply accidents of timing. These weren't merely funny films that happened to come out at a time when society was in crisis. These were exactly the films that everyone needed at that moment, and they gave their audiences a lifeline at a moment in history when everything was very dark indeed. After our recent screening of  Sullivan's Travels , it was pointed out to me that 1941 (the year of that film's release) was the same year in which Olivier Messiaen had composed his Quartet for the End of Time , written while he wa

Perhaps the Stork was a Duck...

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I have frequently spoken about the infamous Hays Office censorship code that was imposed on Hollywood in 1934, because it was to have an enormous impact on the way films were made for the next few decades. Most of the specifics of the production code came from ultra-conservative pressure groups who wanted to enforce their own conception of decency and "acceptable behaviour". The self-proclaimed Legion of Decency (originally called the Catholic Legion of Decency) was founded in 1934 by John T. McNicholas, the Archbishop of Cincinnati. There was surely no one more qualified to enforce the moral standards of the nation than a Catholic Archbishop from Cincinnati. Unsurprisingly, many of the restrictions that found their way into the production code were explicitly Catholic; especially when it came to the subject of sex . The Legion of Decency had very strong opinions about the notion of pregnancy out of wedlock, and so that of course became one of the most notably taboo plot dev