Bette Davis' Least Favorite Film
By Ed Garea
Parachute
Jumper (WB,
1933) –
Director: Alfred E. Green. Writers: John Francis Larkin (s/p), Rian
James (story “Some Call It Love”). Cast: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.,
Bette Davis, Frank McHugh, Claire Dodd, Leo Carillo, Harold Huber, &
Thomas E. Jackson. B&W, 65 minutes.
Back
in the days of my misspent youth, one of my television staples was
late night programming, especially Johnny Carson and Dick Cavett. I
would alternate between them, depending who the guests were that
night. One night, Cavett was the clear winner because his only guest
that night was the one and only Bette Davis. Davis was always a great
interview because of her no holds barred approach to any subject. At
one point in the interview she was going on about her early years at
Warner’s, back when she appeared in almost anything to get
experience. I remember Cavett asking what her least favorite film
was. Without hesitating, Bette spat out “Parachute Jumper.” I
forgot the specific reasons why that night, but it seems that she
held it in low regard for quite some time. A clip from the movie was
even featured in Davis’s film What Ever Happened to Baby
Jane? as an example of her character’s declining movie
career.
But
was it as dreadful as she said it was? I remember writing down the
title after the Cavett show and taping it next to my television as a
reminder. Every week I would scour through TV Guide, back
then the indispensable resource for the Movie Nut. After weeks of
searching, I finally found the film listed for a late showing. When I
watched it I realized it was not nearly as bad as Davis intimated. It
wasn’t good, but it wasn’t that bad; at least it was
watchable. I came to realize that perhaps the reason Davis hated the
film so much was because she wasn’t very good in
it.
Parachute
Jumper was made during Davis’s early years at Warner
Bros., when they didn’t exactly know what to do with her. It wasn’t
until she made Of Human Bondage in 1934 for RKO that
they knew what they had. And even after she won the Oscar the next
year for Dangerous, they still didn’t know what to do
with her. She had to flee to England and try (unsuccessfully) to
break her contract before Warner’s finally got the message.
But
back in these early days, Davis usually was cast as “The
Girlfriend.” In Parachute Jumper, Davis is
Patricia “Alabama” Kent, an unemployed steno who runs into the
duo of Bill Keller (Fairbanks) and Toodles Cooper (McHugh), two
former Marine pilots looking for work as commercial pilots. Patricia
is supposedly called “Alabama” because of her Southern accent,
but the film is being very generous here, for it sounds as if
Patricia is from southern New England rather than the Southern United
States. After buying her breakfast with the remains of his money,
Bill, upon hearing that Alabama is homeless, invites her to bunk with
him and Toodles in their apartment. Discerning that his intentions
are honorable, she agrees. Bill tries his hand at parachute jumping
(hence the title) with an aerial show and is nearly killed when he
lands on railroad tracks in front of an oncoming train.
After
promising Alabama he will never try that stunt again, Bill overhears
two chauffeurs talking about a Mrs. Newberry, who is in dire need of
an elegant chauffeur. He spends the money he earned for the parachute
stunt to buy a uniform and gets the job. It seems, though, that a
chauffeur is to provide more services for Mrs. Newberry (Dodd) than
merely driving. As she’s coming on to him in her apartment, her
gangster boyfriend, Kurt Weber (Carrillo) enters, catching Keller in
a most awkward position. He gets set to shoot Bill, but impressed
with his pluck in the situation, boots Mrs. Newberry out of the
apartment and offers Bill a job as his bodyguard, which Bill accepts.
At
first Bill’s job consists of hiding behind a curtain in Weber’s
office, pistol ready in case someone tries to kill his boss. One day,
he hears Alabama in Weber’s office flirting and offering her
services as a secretary. Back home, Bill and Alabama argue, mainly,
it seems because they’re supposed to fight about something at this
juncture of the movie.
Weber
is, among other nasty things, a bootlegger, and once he discovers
that both Bill and Toodles are pilots, he hires them to replace his
former pilots, whom he hasn’t paid, to smuggle booze in from
Canada. The former pilots are whacked for their troubles in trying to
collect what was owed them. So now we have it that Mr. Weber is not
exactly a nice guy, which will play itself later into a stronger plot
point.
During
a smuggling trip to Canada, Bill and Toodles are intercepted by the
Border Patrol. Bill shoots them down, believing them to be hijackers.
Alabama overhears a conversation Weber is having with his enforcer
about taking out Bill and Toodles. She informs Bill and convinces him
to resign, which he does. But Weber asks him to do just one more job
and Bill reluctantly agrees. When Bill discovers that the little
packages he’s been picking up along with the hootch contain drugs,
he decides he’s had enough. But Weber forces him and Toodles into
the plane, planning to kill them and dispose of their bodies while
airborne. Bill overpowers Weber, tells Toodles to hit the silk, and
crashes his plane, making it look as though Weber had been flying
with him as his captive.
The
film fades out with Toodles re-upping in the Marines, and Bill, after
getting Alabama’s permission, joining him as well.
Parachute
Jumper is
nothing more than a routine programmer, directed by Alfred E. Green,
who, along with Lloyd Bacon was one of Warner’s house directors,
counted upon to deliver the script as is in a pre-set amount of time
with no hijinks in the artistic department. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
was Warner’s answer to Clark Gable, although he was never given the
sort of roles –
and expense budgets –
that would propel Gable into the stardom stratosphere. Fairbanks was
actually a good actor saddled with an impossible legacy, being the
son of Douglas Sr. and the stepson of Mary Pickford. As a star, he
lacked what would be later called the indeterminable charisma to
carry a picture. Later, he reinvented himself as a sort of David
Niven-esque actor; a charming bon
vivant.
McHugh is the comic relief in the film as exemplified by the name
“Toodles.” Toodles?
Leo Carrillo is smoothly sinister as Weber, and Claire Dodd
practically invisible as Mrs. Newberry.
As
for Fairbanks and Davis, their chemistry is limited, as if they were
speeding through the picture. As a matter of fact, the pacing
of Parachute Jumper is rapid, with one scene melting
into another no matter if there’s a logical relation or not.
There's the scene with Bill joining the aerial show as a parachute
jumper, then just as quickly dropping the job to become a driver and
ultimately get involved with bootlegger Weber with all the fell of
merely being inserted to justify the film’s title; after all, he
only jumps once in the film, while the title would
lead us to believe it’s about the world of those who do it for a
living.
Davis
herself has little to do in the film besides admiring, and later
scolding, Bill’s acts of courageous stupidity. As mentioned before,
it’s not one of her better performances, but it is better than some
of the programmers she did in 1935 and 1936. Perhaps the reason she
knocked it so much was because, for her, all the small bad roles
seemed to have melded into one with the passage of time.
McHugh
is McHugh – always entertaining no
matter what the plot or set-up. As Comic Relief his one duty is to be
a loyal sidekick to The Hero, which he does quite admirably. He has
one good scene after hitting the silk at the end, landing safely, and
trying to hitch a ride. When a motorist drives by without stopping,
McHugh drops his thumb and flips the bird.
There
are other telltale signs that this is a Pre-Code film as well. Their
Marine commanders discover Bill and Toodles in a brothel
in Nicaragua after being presumed lost when their plane
crashed.
Despite
the fact that Alabama sleeps on the couch in Bill and Toodles’
apartment while the boys share a bed, there are still some sexual
goings-on between Bill and Alabama with Bill walking in on her in the
middle of the night. When she calls him on it he weakly replies that
he’s only checking up on her to see if she’s OK, then tells her
that it won’t happen again, at least not as long as he’s sober.
When Mrs. Newberry hires Bill as her chauffeur she first notices his
physique and later tells him that his job will include considerable
“night work.” In case he doesn’t quite get it, she goes on to
tell him that her previous chauffeurs were all Frenchmen because they
are much “more versatile.”
Bill
is perfectly happy smuggling in liquor because Prohibition was
treated in the movies as the national joke. It’s referred to in one
scene as “What Law?” “The one we all laugh at.” But when Bill
discovers that, in addition to booze, he’s also smuggling in
narcotics, well, that crosses the line and Weber is not only a
criminal, but a low life as well. Even though “Weber” is a
somewhat generic name, Leo Carrillo, a distinctly Italian-looking
actor plays him with a trace of Italian accent. Our heroes may be
smugglers, bootleggers and petty thieves, but they are not dope
dealers.
In
the next to final scene, Bill is looking for Alabama in an office
building. “I’m going to go through this building like a dose of .
. .” as the elevator doors close, cutting him off (though the
audience well understood what he was saying). As he runs from office
to office, barging in, looking for Alabama, he comes across a rather
fey individual taking notes. Fairbanks’ reaction to is put on a
showgirl voice and camp it up.
The
other thing Parachute Jumper has going for it is the
mood and tone. Set in the midst of the Depression, it reflects the
things most people had to do back then just to survive. When Bill
meets Patricia on a park bench and offers to buy her breakfast, he
shows her some sugar cubes he’s stolen as they left the restaurant.
She replies by showing him a bottle of ketchup she heisted from the
place. Comparing their respective take, they laugh about it while
worrying where the next meal will come from. We’re never far from
the realities of joblessness and homelessness, but we are still
determined not to let it get the better of us. We may get knocked
down, but we get right up again. This is the underlying message of
the film. Watch Fairbanks in any of his other Warner's films and we
get the same impression of Depression life. He may have to sell his
body to Mrs. Newberry to keep his job, but that was accepted as part
of the facts of life, as was Davis’ flirtation with Weber to land a
job as his secretary. It was nothing that couldn’t be overcome with
time and luck.
Parachute
Jumper, while not the best picture of the Pre-Code period, is
still entertaining, not only because of the snappy dialogue, but also
for its aerial scenes. One sure way to entice an audience in those
days was to feature airborne daredevil acrobatics, as flying was
still a novelty. Given the fact that in 1933 sound itself was still
in its infancy, we can understand the inclusion of the action
sequences as sound was tied to the stage; a straight progression with
nuances such as subtext still in the future. Best of all, Parachute
Jumper clocks in at an economical 65 minutes, which makes it
ideal viewing for late at night.
Afterwords
Leo
Carrillo was a solid supporting actor who kicked around in movies
until gaining a measure of fame as Pancho, the sidekick to Duncan
Renaldo’s Cisco Kid in a series of films made from 1948 to 1950,
and continuing as a television show for 157 episodes from 1950 to
1956.
In
his autobiography, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. said that Bette Davis
thought director Alfred E. Green’s sense of humor was infantile. Of
his co-star, he stated that she was “not particularly pretty,”
but rather quite plain. But “one didn’t easily forget her unique
personality.” He also characterized her as always conscientious and
serious, devoid of humor. Be this as it may, it certainly didn’t
stop producer Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. from hiring Davis two decades
later to star in Another
Man’s Poison.
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