Heroes for Sale (1933) Poster

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8/10
A different kind of precode
AlsExGal27 March 2017
After the dawn of sound, Warner Bros. wandered through the early-talkie wilderness trying their hand at Technicolor musicals and revues that largely did not work out. Around 1930 they changed their output to be what we think of when we think about the Warner Bros. of the 1930's - gritty Depression era films that pulled no punches in depicting the hardships of those days. Here Richard Barthelemess is Tom Holmes. Tom's life is a metaphor for just about every social injustice from 1917 through 1933 you can pack into a 70-plus minute film. Through his life we visit the post-war hardships of WWI doughboys including morphine addiction, the double-edged sword of automation, the Red scares and hysteria of the 1920's, and finally the armies of unemployed Depression-era men treated as lepers as they wandered from town to town in search of non-existent jobs.

It's an interesting picture of a bleak world populated with largely unlikable characters such as the socialist who becomes a capitalist as soon as he becomes wealthy and the soldier that stole a wartime honor from Tom only to return home and not stand up for him when Tom really needs him. You do have to overcome some obvious problems in logic to enjoy this film. For one, nobody is as long-suffering as Tom Holmes is in this film, having so much adversity unjustly piled on him and still at heart an optimist. However, the film is a great political precode, and one whose script would not have been possible even a year later with its explicit sarcasm about the American social and economic order.
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8/10
A compelling, schizophrenic slice of depression era bleakness directed by William Wellman.
SeanAx25 July 2001
Interesting, bleak depression-era story of man whose life swings back and forth from success to horrible tragedy. A lot like WILD BOYS OF THE ROAD, another great but weird slice of depression era bleakness directed by William Wellman. Here, Richard Barthelmess survives WWI only to get addicted to morphine, rises to the top of the business world before he's cheated out of his work, and that's just the beginning of his troubles. The portrait of labor strife, Bolshevik organizers, and violent oppression by the cops presents a far more political portrait of the depression from the perspective of the poor than usually seen in these films. It's a schizophrenic but fascinating film, bouncing between goofy comedy, heavy tragedy, and gritty, grim resolve. The armies of homeless men tramping the rails and the countryside is an image that won't go away soon.
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8/10
Villains Come Free
writers_reign17 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
There are echoes of Dos Passos here, especially the USA trilogy, perhaps most notably in the 'wobblies' sequences though strangely for such a factual hard-hitting film the Industrial Workers Of The World are never mentioned by name nor is Gene Debs, whose philosophy runs through it. Like The Roaring Twenties at the end of the decade it begins in the trenches of WW1 where the character of the protagonists are quickly delineated. Richard Barthelmes is also something of a Candide figure - not perhaps so obvious as his similarity to Jean Valjean - taking every setback on the chin and still keeping his humanity intact. The plot has been dealt with in reasonable detail by other commenters so suffice it to say that the support is excellent notably from Aline McMahon, with Charley Grapewin, Robert Barratt and Loretta Young not far behind. A memorable early talkie.
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Worth Looking Into
dougdoepke8 April 2009
The screenplay may meander, but it wanders into territory that would remain untouched for years courtesy the straitjacketing Production Code of 1934. Consider the outspoken communist Max Brinker railing against the plundering rich. Sure, the screenplay eventually capitulates by showing him up as a rank opportunist utterly devoted to wealth when he gets the chance. But for a few minutes the communist is actually a somewhat sympathetic character. Then too, maybe main character Tommy Holmes should have listened to some of those railings. That way he would have known that while he might strike an altruistic deal with one capitalist (laundry owner Gibson), another will break it as soon as he sees a competitive advantage in doing so. Thus innovative machines come to replace human labor in the laundry, and more people join the unemployment lines. Not exactly a standard plot development for post-1934 Hollywood.

Then there's the Red Squad, sort of the thought-police of the time, usually off-duty cops paid by local business interests to hound union organizers and other troublemakers out of town. The movie makes clear that the two squad members who confront Holmes will use force unless he complies, which he meekly does. Still and all, how many Americans even know that such extra-legal groups as Red Squads operated during the Depression, while authorities looked the proverbial other way. Then too, isn't it odd how tissue-thin free speech becomes when it directly challenges the prerogatives of wealth and power, as union organizing especially did. The vigilantes at the movie's end are somewhat similar, except their motives are less political. Instead, they were generally civilians from the community kicking the footloose unemployed down the road because their own town is too ravaged to help. Maybe that's not charitable, but it is understandable.

Speaking of charity, the final few scenes illustrate the importance of government action in the face of increasing hunger and joblessness. Sure, Holmes proves himself something of a secular saint in using his wealth to feed the hungry. But what happens to those same needy if he suddenly changes his mind, dies, or goes broke. To me, this shows the limitations of voluntary giving as a societal solution, praiseworthy as giving may be. No, something like broad-based government action is needed when there's a breakdown in the economy itself. Whatever the screenplay's real deficiencies in treating these issues, they are at least raised. And just as tellingly, these same highly charged topics would for all practical purposes disappear from movie screens for the next several decades.

The movie itself has a number of noteworthy scenes. Wellman's filming of the unemployment riot is both vigorous and persuasive, as is the battlefield scene with its hellish terrain separating the German and American sides. As a director and veteran of WWI, Wellman's clearly at home with such subjects. I like the way the screenplay prepares us for Holmes' extraordinarily humane behavior by having him first experience great pain and then drug addiction stemming from a war wound. In the process, he learns the personal value of charity and mercy. It's also gutsy, I think, to show him rescued and pulled back from death by a German field hospital and the German branch of the Red Cross. Hollywood seldom affords the enemy such magnanimous gestures as it does here.

Also, consider how Holmes the returning vet is left essentially to manage as best he can with a war wound and a morphine addiction. Apparently there was no program at the time to help vets return successfully to civilian life, much as vets of the Iraq war were left to deal unaided with Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome and Vietnam vets with the effects of Agent Orange. Then too, the screenplay makes Holmes' plight especially ironic since he's the true war hero, and not the fair-haired Roger Winston. Yet because of the fog of battle, it's the cowardly Winston who's awarded officer's rank and mistaken for a hero, while Holmes is left to struggle alone and unrecognized. Thus, the whole idea of heroism amid the fog of war is portrayed as more problematic than generally thought.

The movie itself benefits from Barthelmess' understated performance as the pivotal Holmes. His character comes across as something of an everyman, such that his humane potential thereby becomes everyman's potential. Also, Gordon Westcott as the weakling Winston manages to add an unexpectedly sympathetic touch to a basically unsympathetic role. But I especially like Aline MacMahon as the lovelorn Mary. Watch how subtly she conveys her unrequited affection from the moment she first meets Holmes. It's a rather poignant performance suggesting the plight of the plain-faced woman in a culture that especially prizes feminine beauty.

Thanks are owed to TCM for reviving these "forbidden" films from the pre-code era. I've been a fan of the late show in big market LA for 40 years, and I don't recall any of the movies being shown on commercial channels during that period. To me, this suggests that the films were either too titillating or too political to get a commercial airing. And by the time the lid did come off in the 70's, they had been assigned to the movie dustbin and forgotten. But as Heroes shows, films from this grievously neglected period were willing to take on difficult and controversial topics. And just as importantly, the topics here are ones that remain as relevant now as they were then.
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9/10
A Yank Jean Valjean-- worth searching-for
Tector14 July 1999
HEROES FOR SALE is available on videotape as part of the "Forbidden Hollywood" series of pre-Hayes Code films. Since it is not salacious, unlike most of this line, its inclusion is a bit of a stretch-- its hero's morphine addiction is honestly come-by. Still, it is a grabber-- I have shown it to three acquaintances, and each has been as surprised as I. Why isn't this film better known? If you trouble yourself to find a copy, what you will get is a furiously compacted plot line that resembles an Americanized LES MISERABLES. Won't spoil the surprises, which are frequent. But the plot is hardly more surprising than the film's anger-- watch for the series of quick scenes late in the film documenting a Red-scare vendetta by Chicago police. What really seems "forbidden" here are the politics.
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9/10
Wounded war vet has plenty of problems to overcome
gerrytwo3 November 1998
In under 65 minutes, "Heroes for Sale" deals with drug addiction, Red Squads, automation, the Great Depression and World War I. This movie's time frame covers the end of the Great War to the election of FDR, and makes some very pointed observations about America along the way. There are no stereotypes in this movie, and except for the sanctimonious fadeout, I would have rated this movie a 10. "Heroes for Sale" was the last movie William Wellman directed under contract at Warner Bros. and he did a great job. With the onset of the production code in July, 1934, this movie was buried because of its treatment of drug addiction. "Heroes for Sale" is a top notch movie ahead of its time.
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7/10
Good Slice of Depression Era America
bobzmcishl18 April 2009
I rented this movie after reading about William Wellman and his adventure filled life. Heroes for Sale captures the mood of the Great Depression, a time when rich people were not celebrities to be worshiped and envied, but villains who oppressed the working class. The movie is noteworthy as a benchmark for how we lived during a period of economic turmoil 75 years ago versus today. The unemployment ratio is about 1/3 of what is was then and we now have safety nets that weren't available 75 years ago. Also we treat our returning veterans better for the most part. This movie is enjoyable from start to finish and the beauty of it is there is no Hollywood ending per Se. One of the enjoyments is the way early 30's movies had the ability to encapsulate so much plot into a little over an hour. No wonder it was possible to watch a double bill back then. I am looking forward to watching more of Wellman if this movie is any indication of his work. Loretta Young was certainly one of the Hollywood beauties of that era, and a good actress even at that early age. The movie appears faithful to the history of that period in its portrayal of the "Red Squads", treatment of veterans, soup kitchens, and authoritarian figures in general. The morphine segment at the start of the movie is very realistic and not far from the pain killing addition medications of the 21st century.
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8/10
stunning, important, social message film with beautiful filming and acting
secondtake8 September 2013
Heroes for Sale (1933)

Okay, this is frankly a great movie. It's a "type" of movie that may or may not be your thing--a social conscience film. Warner Bros. in particular was famous for these, and the year before had made the astonishing "I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang."

In a way, this one owes a lot to that previous film. The theme is similar--a returning WWI vet runs into trouble adjusting to life at home. And the progression is similar, as this leading man goes through huge ups and downs over many years. There are even similar devices used, like showing several places on the map as he wanders the country, showing his paychecks go up over the years (during a successful period), and using a dates to move the narrative ahead quickly.

The crisis in this movie is not a man wrongly accused of a crime, but a man struggling with morphine addiction from war injuries. Once he overcomes that he rises up but because of his compassion for the poor he's labelled a "Red" meaning a communist and is targeted again. The cycle gets worse and worse.

The leading man, Richard Barthelmess, is (like Paul Muni in "Fugitive") a real actor, less a matinée idol and more a compassionate, emotive performer. And he makes the movie complex and heartwrenching. His wife, when you get to that point, is a young, chipper Loretta Young, who is great, but even better is Young's sidekick, who has a growing part as the movie goes, Aline MacMahon. She represents the truest goodness of all the people in the movie, matching the more exaggerated kindness of Barthelmess.

Eventually the movies moves from 1918 (in the war, actual battle scenes) to 1933, with the depths of the Depression kicking in. And so a whole new kind of despair is on view--something the audience itself felt very much. That's something hard to remember or feel is that the audience was not only suffering much like the people in the movie, they had no idea (!!) when and if the suffering, the Depression, would end. Like "Fugitive," this movie ends with that despair on screen.

But boy is this well made. Well photographed, great modern sound, and wonderful direction by the undervalued great Hollywood master William Wellman. Wellman is one of a handful of terrific directors who never developed his own style outside of what the studio was creating as an institution. But for about twelve years or so (up to "Ox-Bow Incident") he made, on and off, some really terrific, classic, still-powerful movies. "Heroes for Sale" is one of them.
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7/10
"I guess we're all kind of cracked, one way or another."
utgard1430 July 2014
Story of a man named Tom Holmes (Richard Barthelmess) and the many hardships he faces. The movie starts in WWI where Tom is seriously injured being a hero. But all he gets for that is an addiction to morphine he takes for the pain, while his commanding officer gets a medal and takes the glory for Tom's actions. Tom is fired from his job and committed to a clinic for his morphine addiction. While he's detoxing, his mom dies. Then things gets better for awhile before he gets mixed up with the "Red Scare" and it all comes crashing down again.

Fascinating curio of its era that tackles several topical issues. Richard Barthelmess, little known today, gives a compelling performance that carries the whole film. Loretta Young is lovely and sweet as his dutiful wife. Great character actress Aline MacMahon gives a sensitive turn as their friend. Robert Barrat is quite good as a hypocritical socialist. Well-directed by William Wellman with a solid script, this is a must-see for fans of gritty Depression-era films. It's fine entertainment but it also gives you a lot to think about.
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10/10
He gave everything....
dbdumonteil30 June 2008
...and took nothing for himself....

This Aline McMahon's last line will haunt you long after watching this extremely moving work by William Wellman who was ,along Frank Borzage,America's finest director of the early talkies.Both were fighting for the dignity of men,both made movies which -it's all over nowadays,with the possible exception of perhaps Clint Eastwood's work- can help us become better men and women.

THere are similarities between "Heroes for sale" and "I'm a fugitive from a chain gang" .In the latter,Paul Muni tries to sell his medals but in the shop,they already got too many of them,so he 's got to steal.In "heroes for sale" ,Tom ,who lost all the honors to a coward who shamelessly walked away with the glory,has to cope with everyday's life in the years of depression.

Wellman ,although his films were heartfelt pleas for the human being ,was not optimistic.Happy ends were not for him: Tom (Heroes) ,Gilda ("Safe in hell") and Lilly Turner in the eponymous film are victims of the war,of fate or of men.They want to keep their promise (it's obvious in Gilda's and Tom's case) ,even if it costs them their life or their happiness.And let's not forget "the oxbow incident",the saddest of all westerns ,a scene of which shows Dana Andrews writing a letter to his wife he knew he was not to see again.

When I watch these Wellman oldies ,I'm amazed by this:the really happy moments are so few and far between I wonder how a man or a woman at the end of a hard earned day find some reason to believe.But they are here: the restaurant where Aline McMahon takes in the last lonely and wretched and gives to the poor for free ;Loretta Young's smile which lightens up the seediest of the rooms;the boy saying :"when I grow up,I want to be like him".

A masterpiece that should not missed.
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7/10
Pandora's Box
1930s_Time_Machine22 November 2022
If you liked Of Mice And Men, you will like this.

Although the story has more misery, bad luck, heartbreak and then even more misery avalanching onto our hero than you'd find in the most cynical of Roger Waters' Pink Floyd songs, this film somehow manages to remain positive. It makes you angry, it makes you sad but it also gives you faith in humanity. Tom Holmes, our hero never gives up, there's always hope for just around the corner. However much life batters him down, he retains a glimmer of light, a dignified belief in his fellow man, a belief that surely things can't get any worse (even though they do!). This makes this film palatable for the audience of 1933 and watchable for us ninety years later.

For 1933 it's exceptionally well made. It's totally believable because of its very natural and 'modern' style of acting. William Wellman directs with imagination and style creating 75 minutes of completely engaging first rate entertainment without recoursing to cliched melodrama or sentimentality. That such character development happens in such a short movie is astounding - in the hands of a modern tv maker getting to know a character in such depth would take a couple of TV seasons. Although so much happens in such a small period it time, it doesn't feel rushed at all. Some scenes are beautifully and often poignantly extended allowing us to fully appreciate what we're experiencing. The roll of the tear down Loretta Young's cheek for example.

Without giving anything away, the ending might seem like someone just decided that an uplifting, positive piece of optimism needed to be stuck on the end. This is what did happen but as incongruous as it feels, it's perfect. It was indeed added as an afterthought but with good reason. During production Pres. Hoover (who was partly responsible for making the Depression the Great Depression) was ousted by FDR (the guy who slowly fixed America). This didn't just give hope to Warner's 'socially conscious' head of production, Daryl Zanuck, apparently it really did inspire the nation. Zanuck therefore shoe-horned some of FDR's speech of hope and optimism into the end of the film because at that point in time, that really was the mood of the nation.

I can't say I'm that familiar with Richard Barthelmess but he is outstanding in this, he is a real person, he's nothing special just an ordinary man. He's someone we will like, someone we will believe in and as we discover, someone who is a real inspirational hero.
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9/10
Powerful, painful Depression-era tale
zetes26 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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7/10
Wow, this one's bleak
marcslope9 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Warners early-talkie social consciousness at its most vocal, this William Wellman programmer is uncommonly cynical and negative; it doesn't send you out happy, and I can't imagine it was a hit in the depths of the Depression. It's the saga of an unsung hero, underplayed sympathetically by Richard Barthelmess, who suffers enough bad luck to fill at least two more movies. A hero in war, he lets an unscrupulous friend take credit for his deeds, then becomes addicted to morphine when it's used to treat his war wounds. He goes through detox rather easily and quickly, the first of several credibility-challenging developments. Others include his drawing a five-year prison sentence for leading a riot, when it would be clear to any observer he's innocent; his wife dying in said riot (a surprisingly graphic sequence); being suspected of being a red and chased out of Chicago; and running into his old Army buddy in a Hooverville. There's some pro-FDR proselytizing and some persuasive looks at soup kitchens, job-displacing industrialization, and mob violence. And through it all there's Aline MacMahon, one of the best actresses Warners ever had, making much of a not-that-interesting best-friend part. I don't buy all the relentlessly negative plot twists, but it's a powerful film, and it sticks to the bones.
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5/10
Filthy Capitalists
bkoganbing2 October 2009
Heroes For Sale concerns the life during and post World War I of that of Richard Barthelmess. The film goes from his struggle with morphine addiction to labor problems during the Great Depression with only the flimsiest of connections between the plot lines. I felt almost like the film abruptly switched movies, that maybe the projectionist got the reels mixed up.

Barthelmess and Gordon Westcott are part of a mission to capture German prisoners and gain some intelligence, Barthelmess is wounded and thought to be dead, Westcott brings in the prisoners and gets credit and medals for what Barthelmess did. When Westcott discovers Barthelmes alive on the troop ship returning home, he gets him a job with his father Berton Churchill's bank.

Berton Churchill is in many ways doing a dress rehearsal for his career role as banker Gatewood in Stagecoach. You'll have to see Heroes For Sale to see what I mean. The problem is that Barthelmess has taken back an addiction to morphine souvenir of World War I. That was something far more prevalent than generally believed. When its discovered, Barthelmess is fired and sent to a hospital for a cure. That's not shown, but it usually meant cold turkey and we'd have to wait until the Mid Fifties with Frank Sinatra going through withdrawal in Otto Preminger's The Man With A Golden Arm to see that graphically illustrated.

After this Heroes For Sale abruptly switches to Barthelmess leaving that town and going to Chicago where he gets a job in a laundry and meets and marries Loretta Young who works at a hash house with sister Aline McMahon and father Charley Grapewin. Barthelmess is a go getter and impresses company president Grant Mitchell.

After this the film gets a bit ridiculous. Robert Barrat a malcontent with socialist views whose a regular at the hash house invents a folding machine which will save all kinds of labor costs. Barthelmess helps sell it to management and gets a 50% cut. The usual thing happens and men go out of work.

But Barthelmess is a man of exquisite conscience, he both leads a riot of the newly unemployed workers and won't take a penny of the filthy money from the invention for himself. Even when he goes to prison for leading same riot in which police were killed. In the end he does have a meeting with Westcott in an ironic twist going back to the first part of the film.

Barthelmess's character is way too saintly for me, it's just simply too much to swallow. Automation was and is a fact of life even today. It can and does lead to other, but different kind of jobs. This is where government retraining programs come in, not the Luddite solutions that Heroes For Sale seems to advocate.

I will say this, by far the best performance in the film is by Robert Barrat who's a real red agitator against capitalism until he accumulates a lot of capital because of his invention. It's a real treat to see him change from work to evening clothes and now rail against helping those unemployed who were once his comrades in solidarity forever.

I wish William Wellman had directed a film that strictly was about the struggle against morphine addiction, the first part showed far better promise than the second one.
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Cynical and Superb
drednm17 December 2007
Tough film from Warners during the depth of the Depression. Richard Barthelmess is great as the hapless "hero" who endures the misfortunes of WW I and the Depression, addiction and the "red scare." The film also boasts good work from Loretta Young, Aline MacMahon, Gordon Westcott, Charley Grapewin, Berton Churchill, Grant Mitchell, Robert Barrat, and James Murray as the blind solider.

Barthelmess was a major silent star and had a solid career in early talkies in films like THE LAST FLIGHT, THE DAWN PATROL, WEARY RIVER, and others. He also gave one of the all-time great performances in silent film in TOL'ABLE David.

HEROES FOR SALE is terrific because it shows how an ordinary man can beaten by an ordinary life and still be great. As Barthelmess suffers the misfortunes of war and life he seems to grow as a spiritual person. The hypocrisy around him never seems to get to his heart. There's a great scene where Barthelmess is sitting in the rain in a hobo camp when his eyes meet another man's. It's the banker's son (Gordon Westcott) who took the war glory after he thought Barthelmess had been killed. The sanctimonious banker had fired Barthelmess for his morphine addiction, but finally gets caught for stealing from the bank's depositors. The banker and son also did jail time (as Barthelmess did for leading a riot). The ironies of life become full blown there in the rain. A terrific scene.

Barthelmess is wonderful and so is Gordon Westcott (in his best film role). Young and MacMahon are always pleasures to watch.
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9/10
Filled With Fascinating Characters
ccthemovieman-131 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Here's another good example of an entertaining early 1930s film, sometimes referred to as "Pre-Code movies." One aspect of them is that most are very fast-moving, and "Heroes For Sale" is no exception.

Yes, it has some whopping credibility issues but many movies do. The fact is, it was extremely entertaining, "and that's the name of that tune," as "Baretta" used to say.

Not only was the story fast-paced but the characters are very diverse and the acting is excellent. So is the direction of William Wellman and the photography of James Van Trees. Wow, there were great facial closeups in this film and some of the camera-work was way ahead of its time, with hand-held-like shots here and there.

As for the story, well....talk about a guy who gets bad breaks in life but keeps his chin up! That's "Tom Holmes" (Richard Barthelmess), who gets robbed out of being honored as a World War I hero while some wimpy snake gets the honor instead, later gets arrested and thrown in jail for five years for the doing the opposite of what he really was doing! He also loses his beautiful and beloved wife "Ruth" (Loretta Young) and yet survives it all with dignity and an attitude that would make Mother Teresa and Billy Graham proud. Money? To Mr. Holmes, that's only to use for either family or people in need, never for himself. The thing he does near the end of the film with all his money is mind-boggling but the greatest, unselfish act you'll ever see on film.

The supporting actors in here fascinating, beginning with Aline MacMahon as "Mary Dennis," another really good-hearted person. Then there's the crazy Communist, "Max Brinker," (Robert Barret) who spouts off throughout the first half of the movie about the evils of capitalism, but then changes his tune when he becomes rich!!! Those two, along with Gordon Westcott's portrayal of "Roger Winston," a man who is constantly too weak to do the right things, are all mesmerizing in their own ways.

Everybody in here is interesting, to be honest. This movie is worth a look if you see it listed on the TCM Network. It's also part of the DVD, "Forbidden Hollywood: Volume Three."
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8/10
Commie agit-prop from Warner Brothers!
JohnSeal26 April 2000
This is a terrific pre-code drama that is surprisingly leftist, even by the standards of the time. See the capitalist bosses exploit the workers! See the workers march against the bosses! See the cops smash their heads! It's all here, plus a hefty dollop of morphine addiction, in a must see for fans of thirties neo-realism.
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7/10
Bad Hair Days.
rmax3048231 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is the kind of movie that, in 1949, would have the producers, director, writer, actors, extras, gaffers, and best boy blacklisted and working under pseudonyms in Britain. Well, maybe a spell in the slams too.

Richard Barthelmess is a hero in World War I. Terribly wounded, he winds up in agony in a German hospital and is shot full of morphine, turning him into an addict. When he returns home, he has trouble at his bank job, his hands shaking, distracted by his need for morphine, and is fired before being sent to a hospital for two years.

This morphine business is kind of interesting. Pardon me for a moment while I put on my Sociology hat. Where did I put that thing? Ah, okay.

Barthelmess's experience is a good illustration of labeling theory. A study was done of wounded soldiers after World War II. Those with painful wounds received morphine long enough to develop a tolerance and addiction. When the narcotic was stopped, they underwent mild but uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms. They had no explanation for their malaise. Those soldiers who were not told they were in morphine withdrawal recovered and went on with their lives. BUT -- those to whom the true explanation was given tended to become career addicts. The point is that if no one had ever told Barthelmess that his distress was due to morphine withdrawal, he might never have had a problem.

Well, not that particular problem anyway. Barthelmess walks into one disaster after another. He gets a job in a laundry, is promoted regularly because he's an industrious and inventive worker. He marries the gorgeous Loretta Young and they have a son. He invests in a laundry-processing machine that will make the work easier for the employees.

Everything seems rosy, but the new owners of the laundry use the labor-saving device as an excuse to fire three quarters of the workers. The jobless become enraged. Barthelmess is arrested while trying to stop the riot and spends five years in the Crowbar Hotel, after his wife has been accidentally killed in the mêlée. He gets out during the depression and is forced out of town by a committee that's keeping an eye on Reds. He leaves the payoff from the laundry machine behind, and asks the striking Aline MacMahon to look after his son with the money. Last scene: Barthelmess walking along with other homeless men, still hopeful. "Sure, the country's knocked down right now but it'll get back up, better and stronger than before." This summary may make the film sound like a typical early 30s B feature, but it's anything but that.

In "The Grapes of Wrath", the novel, there's a sharp and cynical exchange about "Reds" that uses a curse word I can't print. (A reference in the book to William Randolph Hearst is even worse.) John Ford's movie eliminates the Hearst reference and tones down the conversational exchange about "Reds." Tom Joad asks, "What is these Reds anyway?" His employer replies: "I ain't saying anything about that one way or the other." This film pulls no punches. One character, a German inventor, spouts the usual Marxist rhetoric, quotes Lenin, and rants comically about the exploited workers. (When he becomes rich from his invention, the laundry machine, he turns overnight into a Social Darwinist.) Richard Barthelmess's character is a gentle, forgiving humanist throughout the film. He becomes bitter and angry only in one scene. Barthelmess was a curious actor. Not handsome, and displaying only modest thespian talents, he seemed always hunched over, his head almost level with his shoulders.

There is no gainsaying Loretta Young's beauty. From certain angles she looks a bit like Blythe Danner. But Aline MacMahon takes the acting palm and she has a face that seems made for the camera -- not in any way stunning, the kind of face that one would like to do a portrait of -- fascinating and remarkably gripping in the arrangement of its features. Those eyes -- A daring and memorable movie.
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8/10
Have You Ever Seen the Rain?
wes-connors9 December 2007
Richard Barthelmess (as Tom Holmes) is serving in the Great War (World War I), with buddy Gordon Westcott (as Roger Winston). When Mr. Westcott shows cowardice during an important assignment, Mr. Barthelmess heroically completes the mission. However, Barthelmess is wounded; and, he is taken prisoner by the Germans. Westcott assumes Barthelmess is dead, and takes credit for completing the mission. Meanwhile, Barthelmess is given morphine by German doctors; after the war, he returns to the United States, but has become a drug addict. Westcott helps Barthelmess out by getting him a job in his father's bank. Naturally, a poor morphine addict is going to have a difficult time working in a bank…

Barthelmess performs exceptionally well; and, the filmmakers should be commended for dealing with the story of a war veteran's overcoming of addiction. Director William A. Wellman also excels in "Heroes for Sale". Loretta Young is lovely as Barthelmess' leading lady; but, Aline MacMahon is much more interesting as another woman who secretly desires Barthelmess. Ms. MacMahon might have garnered "Supporting Actress" awards for her characterization, if they had been given in 1933. Watch McMahon watch Barthelmess; and, don't miss Barthelmess' contrasting first look at Ms. Young.

The film deals with political notions which are a little confusing, especially with the communist and/or capitalist character played by Robert Barrat (Max). "Heroes for Sale" begins as World War I ends, and concludes in the "present" era, as FDR becomes President. Barthelmess' character is optimistic about America, stating, "In a few years it will go on bigger and stronger than ever."

******** Heroes for Sale (6/17/33) William A. Wellman ~ Richard Barthelmess, Aline MacMahon, Loretta Young, Gordon Westcott
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6/10
Remembering My Forgotten Man.....
mark.waltz22 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
One of the most unforgettable moments of Warner Brothers' 1933 musical "Gold Diggers of 1933" was the closing number saluting to the returning veterans of World War I who were lost throughout the 20's and early 30's in a maze of massive unemployment, war injuries, prohibition and ultimately the depression. This movie dramatizes the life of such a man (Richard Barthelmess) who comes home from war to find disappointment, ultimate success, and eventually prison and destitution. He sees his heroism being taken over by a cowardly partner, looses his wife in a riot, and ends up in jail for supposedly leading that riot. This pre-code drama covers a lot of territory in a short period of time, and is one reason why Warner Brothers (then producing the gangster films "Little Caesar" and "The Public Enemy", as well as social dramas such as "I am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang" and "Wild Boys of the Road") is regarded as Hollywood's grittiest studio. Barthelmess is merely acceptable as the hero, while Loretta Young is his lovely bride. Aline MacMahon is outstanding as his devoted friend, loving him from the side, and stepping in every time the going gets tough. The scenes of the flop house she runs are unforgettable and filmed with the grittiness that made Warner Brothers great. MacMahon would show her comic skills the very same year as the most acerbic of 1933's "Gold Diggers", and here, her dramatic talents are utilized to the max.
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8/10
An Important and Ultimately Very Sad Social Document
Derutterj-17 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
It has been written by another commentator that to weather the Depression the decision was made at Warner Bros., c. 1932, that principal photography on each picture had to be wrapped in no more than 18 days, and that no retakes could be made without head office approval. How the studio still managed, under these conditions, to generate some of the best movies ever in the 1932-33 release period continues to mystify me, but here's another example. Heroes for Sale doesn't just tell an effective, insightful yarn about the plight of the dispossessed and mistreated in the typical fashion of other films from WB's social protest cycle, it literally seethes with indignation about these conditions. Less fiercely bleak than I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang, equipped with a more detached protagonist in Richard Barthelmess's Tom, it still manages to pack quite a punch. I disagree with the author of the Barthelmess mini-biography who wrote that his acting style didn't translate well when talkies came in. At least here, he is subtle and effective as the shattered WWI vet who after kicking drugs sees his life gradually turn around, in the form of modest but steady career advancement and a beautiful wife, played by the luminous Loretta Young. We know it's all going to go bad, but how this happens isn't quite what I expected. Indeed the plot contrivance (SPOILER ALERT) that tragically unravels Tom's life and puts him on the road to being a grizzled hobo at first seems innocent and trite: his introduction of a labor saving invention at his job. Heroes for Sale is highly topical but not exactly timeless. At first glance the theme of the wronged, abandoned veteran would seem very current, but it is not really on point in this instance. This picture is more an historical document to be seen in the context of the Bonus March and the social upheavals related to that 1932 event.
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6/10
Nice guys finish last
moonspinner5518 August 2017
William A. Wellman directed this original screenplay by Robert Lord and Wilson Mizner about a born loser, a man so stacked against by fate he can't even defend himself when life turns against him. In the lead, Richard Barthelmess is a capable and agreeable actor, however his character's tepid reserve is infuriating. When Barthelmess' Tom Holmes is wrongly arrested for inciting a riot of unemployed workers against the police force, he quietly goes with the down-turning flow of his destiny (wasn't he allowed to speak up at his trial?). Loretta Young is impossibly pretty and sweet as a neighboring boarder who becomes Barthelmess' wife, and Aline MacMahon is perfect as a wise-eyed proprietress with a soft side, but the movie's bumpy narrative (and quick wrap-up) will leave most viewers unsatisfied. **1/2 from ****
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9/10
Brilliant -- and Very Dark
Handlinghandel2 January 2008
Richard Barthelmess is excellent as the war hero whose accomplishments are pinned on a coward. We see this at the outset.

The movie is unremittingly dark. Indeed, it is for W.W.I what film noir was for W.W.II: It shows the disappointment that can await a man who has fought valiantly for his country once he returns home.

Once home, he gets a job but the morphine he'd been given for pain becomes an addiction. He ends up in prison.

I think Aline MacMahan is an underrated performer of early movies. Here she is strong and touching as first Barthelmess's landlady and then his family friend.

Loretta young is effective, too, in a fairly small but significant role.

Robert Barrat provides some comic relief as a Socialist neighbor who makes a big change. His character is the opposite of Barthelmess's: He preaches and talks but when given the chance, he betrays his own ostensible philosophy. Barthelmess does what he needs to do, quietly and without wavering.

There are scenes that rival the best photos of the Depression.

I think this could be called a true tragedy according to Aristotle's definition: Barthelmess plays a proud man who lives by his moral code. He suffers for his unwillingness to bend. And we gasp at what he must therefore go through.
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7/10
A highly entertaining social issue film
planktonrules30 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is a wonderful film provided you can suspend all sense of disbelief. Otherwise, you will soon find yourself saying "hey...this can't possibly happen" again and again.

The film begins with Richard Barthelmess in the army during WWI. He does something very heroic and appears to die in the process. The cowardly and weak commanding officer is assumed to be the hero and with Barthelmess apparently dead, he decides to keep up the charade and he takes credit for Barthelmess' actions. However, the man IS alive and is taken prisoner by the Germans, who nurse him back to health--and he's eventually sent home after the war. The problem is that he's badly injured and is now dependent upon morphine to deal with debilitating pain.

In his new job at the bank owned by the father of the man who claimed to be a hero, Barthelmess is having difficulties due to his dependence on morphine. Instead of coming forward and admitting he needs the drug OR getting off the drug (or taking credit for his war heroics), he is soon exposed and sent to the hospital for treatment. It is interesting that during all this time, although he had access to all that money and couldn't afford to pay for his growing drug habit, he never stole a dime from the bank. For his loyalty, he's cast aside like a used band-aid and when he gets out of the hospital, he leaves town in disgrace.

Dirt poor and alone in a new town, Barthelmess makes good because down deep he's still a very decent guy. He meets a sweet lady (Loretta Young) and marries. He also does great at his job--so much so that he is promoted and life looks grand. However, in a complicated plot twist, he goes from hero to all at work to goat when he is incorrectly blamed for the plant firing most of the employees. These displaced workers are mad and as they are about to riot and destroy the factory, Barthelmess tries to stop them and HE is convicted of starting the riot AND his wife is killed in the fight!!! This guy just can't catch a break and his son is left in the care of Aunt Mary while Barthelmess does a five year stretch in prison.

When he gets out and is ready to assume responsibility for raising his son, local thugs threaten to revoke his parole if he doesn't leave town because he's been branded "a dirty red" for his supposed hand in the riot years earlier. Now, at this point, Richard has over $50,000 in the bank and he could easily have gotten a lawyer and fought this or just taken his boy and moved to another town to live in luxury. After all, $50,000 back then meant you were set for life--plus he still had more royalty money coming each month. Instead, he gave his money to Aunt Mary to run a free food program for the hungry during the Depression. In the final scenes, Barthelmess is being chased and hated throughout the country along with countless other homeless men. Yet, despite this, his faith in America never is diminished and the film ends--with no real resolution to his messed up life.

Now if you think about it, this film consists of Barthelmess doing good again and again and is rewarded each time with a kick in the teeth. Yet repeatedly, he remains optimistic about the future--even as those about him question the direction the country is taking and are about to give up on the American way of life. I know....this must be a remake of Pollyanna!!! Well, actually, it's supposed to be a metaphor about America at the beginning of the Roosevelt administration.

While a very interesting social commentary by pointing out correctly that the country handled its WWI vets shabbily as well as its poor, the film also suffers from perhaps too much optimism from the main character. In addition, some of the characters also seemed a bit hard to believe. While at first, I loved the Communist inventor played by Robert Barrat, when he made his rapid switch to angry Capitalist, it seemed way too much like a stereotype, not a real person. The message that money often corrupts was muddled because the guy simply became a caricature. Additionally, many of the "bad guys" were just too black and white in how they were portrayed. Softening this a bit might have made a more realistic and satisfying film. Still, for 1933, it was a very brave film because it dared to question the system...even though it did occasionally pull its punches. An interesting historical curio and one of the few films of the era that actually acknowledged the Depression and the desperation many Americans were feeling at the time.
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5/10
Extremism in Self Sacrifice
view_and_review5 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
"Heroes for Sale" is about a man with the worst luck in the world, but he had honor and nobility in its stead. Ask me what I thought of his honor and nobility. I hate to say it but not much. I think some people can go too far in their selflessness and he was one such person.

Thomas 'Tom' Holmes (Richard Barthelmess) was a soldier in the Great War tasked with a near impossible mission. He and nine other soldiers were to capture a German enemy. Tom was able to do so even while his platoon-mate, Roger Winston (Gordon Westcott), turned yellow. Tom was shot and captured in the process while Roger returned to the barracks with Tom's prisoner in tow. That led to all kinds of medals, ribbons, and adulation for Roger. Meanwhile, Tom was being tended to in a German prison camp.

So went Tom's luck every step of the way. His only real break was meeting and marrying Ruth Loring (Loretta Young), but even that had a negative consequence.

Life isn't always fair, and I think "Heroes for Sale" made that abundantly clear. Still, when Tom had a chance to live somewhat comfortably, he eschewed it for a life of poverty and vagrancy in order to help out other unfortunate souls. While that can be looked upon as noble and generous, it can also be looked upon as irresponsible. What's the point in giving away all your wealth and becoming destitute to help people? You only join their ranks. Why not give away a portion of your wealth so that 1.) you can avoid the soup line and 2.) you can continue to earn more to donate? It seems like a smart and easy thing to do, but in this movie's efforts to make Tom a martyr and a saint they made him a gullible chump bent on making himself suffer.

Free on Internet Archive.
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