9/10
Powerful, painful Depression-era tale
26 April 2009
Found on the same disc as my favorite Wellman film, Wild Boys of the Road. Anyone interested in Depression-era movies should throw that disc up on your Netflix queue immediately! That's got to be one of the all-time great double features (which lasts only just over two hours). Heroes for Sale is an episodic, sometimes sloppily constructed story, but it's very involving. Richard Barthelmess stars, and the plot follows him from a soldier in WWI to the present, in the middle of the Great Depression. He experiences much hardship and betrayal through his life. Some hugely positive experiences, too, but when you have something good in your life, there's always the possibility of losing it. This is one of the most cynical, heartbreaking movies of all time. It certainly wouldn't be the film you saw to forget about the horror of modern life. The Fred and Ginger movie's playing down the hall. The film has been frequently accused of having socialist or communist leanings. This is partly true. It's certainly not very trustful of capitalism. But it's just as distrustful of communism. One of its main characters, played by Robert Barrat, begins the film as a communist in a flophouse. He later becomes successful and ends up screwing over his friends and scorning the poor. The film also stars Loretta Young, Aline MacMahon, Charlie Grapewin and Gordon Westcott, and all are very strong. A gut-wrencher which, like Wild Boys of the Road, ends with a faint glimmer of hope. Very faint, with the Depression going strong.
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