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Forum Talk => Lifestyles & Entertainment => Open Culture talk => Topic started by: adminssd on January 02, 2025, 03:57:38 AM

Title: The Scene That Reveals the Beauty of Classic Hollywood Cinema
Post by: adminssd on January 02, 2025, 03:57:38 AM
The Scene That Reveals the Beauty of Classic Hollywood Cinema

[html]1939 is widely considered the greatest year in Hollywood history. Back then, writes 1939: The Year in Movies author Tom Flannery, the so-called “Big Eight” major American studios “had a co*bined 590 actors, 114 directors and 340 writers under contract, each of whom worked an eight-hour shift every weekday,” plus half a day on Saturday. […]
                              




   



1939 is widely considered the greatest year in Hollywood history. Back then, writes 1939: The Year in Movies author Tom Flannery, the so-called “Big Eight” major American studios “had a co*bined 590 actors, 114 directors and 340 writers under contract, each of whom worked an eight-hour shift every weekday,” plus half a day on Saturday. “It took an average of 22 days to shoot a movie, at an average cost of $300,000.” Annual grosses exceeding $700 million “made it easier to take a chance on ‘risky’ or co*mercially untested material.” From this industrial environment came forth one new feature for every single day of the year, including Gone With the Wind, The Wizard of Oz, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Stagecoach, and Young Mr. Lincoln.


There’s one problem with this framing: The Philadelphia Story didn’t co*e out until 1940. In his new video above, Evan Puschak, better known as the Nerdwriter, uses that celebrated picture — and in fact, just one of its scenes in particular — to reveal the co*mercial-artistic genius of old Hollywood.






This was not, we must note, an individual genius: “We’re used to thinking about movies as the vision of one person, an auteur director, but the studio system of Hollywood’s golden age didn’t really work like that.” Despite the talent of George Cukor, who went on to direct A Star Is Born and My Fair Lady, “there’s really no auteur here, but rather a collection of top-tier artists and craftsmen co*ing together to realize a great story and elevate great performances,” all of who make important contributions to the scene examined here.


The collaborators identified by Puschak include cinematographer Joseph Ruttenberg, art director Cedric Gibbons (designer of the Oscar statuette), and costume designer Adrian Greenberg (known mononymously as Adrian). Nor can he ignore the work of the film’s three principal performers, a certain Cary Grant, James Stewart, and Katharine Hepburn. It may have been Stewart who won the Academy Award for Best Actor for The Philadelphia Story, but it was Hepburn who ultimately gained the most: having been saddled with a reputation as “box-office poison” in the thirties due to her famously cold screen presence, she seized the chance to portray a character who suffers for similar qualities of personality and is ultimately redeemed. She got her co*eback — and we have a shimmering, witty monument to the most golden of Hollywood’s ages.


Related content:


4,000+ Free Movies Online: Great Classics, Indies, Noir, Westerns, Documentaries & More


Download Vintage Film Posters in High-Res: From The Philadelphia Story to Attack of the Crab Monsters


Martin Scorsese Introduces Classic Movies: From Citizen Kane and Vertigo to Lawrence of Arabia and Gone with the Wind


Every Frame a Painting Returns to YouTube & Explores Why the Sustained Two-Shot Vanished from Movies


When a Modern Director Makes a Fake Old Movie: A Video Essay on David Fincher’s Mank


Raymond Chandler: There’s No Art of the Screenplay in Hollywood


Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletter Books on Cities and the book The Stateless City: a Walk through 21st-Century Los Angeles. Follow him on the social network formerly known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.

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Source: The Scene That Reveals the Beauty of Classic Hollywood Cinema (http://ht**://www.openculture.c**/2025/01/the-scene-that-reveals-the-beauty-of-classic-hollywood-cinema.html)