Films in Focus
By
Ed Garea
Under
18 (WB, 1931) – Director: Archie Mayo.
Writers: Charles Kenyon (s/p), Maude Fulton (s/p), Frank Mitchell
Dazey (Story, “Sky Life”), Agnes Christine Johnston (Story, “Sky
Life”). Cast: Marian Marsh, Anita Page, Regis Toomey, Warren
William, Norman Foster, Joyce Compton, J. Farrell MacDonald, Claire
Dodd, Paul Porcasi, Maude Eburne, Murray Kinnell, Emma Dunn, Dorothy
Appleby, Edward Van Sloan, & Clarence Wilson. B&W, 80
minutes.
What
a great title for a Pre-Code picture! One can only imagine the lurid
images going through a prospective viewer’s mind as he lines up at
the local theater to see this masterpiece of celluloid. It’s a nice
little Depression programmer about a virtuous girl whose whole world
is leading her headlong towards sin. In the end the film never quite
lives up to the title, but not for a lack of trying. What it does
have going for it, though, are the excellent performances of
doll-faced Marian Marsh and the great Warren William.
Teenager
Margie Evans (Marsh), who works as a seamstress to help support her
mother (Dunn) and father (MacDonald), is head over heels in love with
grocery truck driver Jimmie Slocum (Toomey). Yet, she’s worried
their love will not survive the reality of poverty in the Depression.
She envies the models she sees at work – they are always receiving
expensive gifts from wealthy lovers.
As
the film opens, Marge is busy helping sister Sophie (Page) prepare
for her wedding to billiards shark Alf (Foster). Sophie is excited
because Alf has just won a couple of tournaments and is going to take
her for a honeymoon to Atlantic City. Margie herself, head over heels
with excitement, can’t wait for her turn at the altar. After the
ceremony, Sophie’s father breaks out the beer for the celebration.
(This is a working class family, after all; Prohibition be damned.)
Cut
to the present day. Dad has passed and life is now tougher for Margie
and Mom. Adding to the gloom is Sophie and Alf, who arrive at the
already cramped tenement with their baby, one suitcase, and Alf’s
pool cue and trophies. Alf tells Margie and Mom that they’ve given
Newark “the air,” but Sophie quickly sets things straight: “We
might as well tell you the truth. Can you put up a bum and his family
for a couple of nights?” According to Alf, he had to let his pool
hall go. “Yeah – to the sheriff!” Sophie interjects. She goes
on to say that Alf has been unable to find a job and that they’ve
been evicted from their home. She adds that things might have worked
out if he had the gumption to take a job offered to him at a local
soda fountain in their neighborhood, but Alf thought it was beneath
him. Margie calls a halt to the bickering, suggesting things would
look better if they got a good night’s sleep. She suggests to
Sophie that she bunk with her mother, Alf take the couch, and she’ll
sleep on the fire escape, but big sister nixes the plan: “Stick Alf
out there,” she says, pointing to the fire escape. But Margie
insists and leads Sophie to the bedroom while Alf tends to his
trophies. In one of the film’s great lines, he calls out to his
mother-in-law, asking if she has any silver polish. “I’ll find
you some if you promise to eat it!” Sophie shouts from the bedroom.
The
disintegrating relationship between Alf and Sophie dominates the
early part of the film. At the breakfast table, Alf begins to read
the morning paper when Sophie snatches it from him and turns the
pages to the want ads. “Listen here, you,” she says, “I’ll
show you the pages we’re interested in. There it is – now read
it!” Things would be better if Alf were even to look for a job, but
despite Sophie’s continual nagging he refuses, instead staking what
little money he has on pool games in search of the big cash prize.
Margie, witnessing the daily battles between her sister and
brother-in-law, is seriously beginning to question whether marriage
is indeed an option given the grinding poverty of the times.
She
discusses the problem with Jimmie (Toomey) on her front stoop after
their date. He thinks they have enough to get married on, while she
doesn’t. He tells her he’s saved up, but she knows it’s not
enough to satisfy the desires that are running through her head.
Another reason for her reluctance is Jimmie’s seeming lack of
ambition. If they marry, she’ll have to continue to work and
they’ll be poor forever. Her conviction is further strengthened
when she and Jimmie see Margie’s neighbor, Elsie (Appleby), run
down the front stoop and into a waiting limousine. Margie asks Elsie
where she’s going. “Bermuda!” answers Elsie. Margie explains to
Jimmie that Elsie has a wealthy lover and she’s doing quite well.
Jimmie is adamant, however. “Going into everyone’s
backdoors, you see there’s so much grief in the world. Everyone
gets their fair share,” he tells her.
Meanwhile,
things are getting worse for Sophie and Alf. Sophie is relentless as
she pushes Alf to get off his duff and go look for work. Margie is
glad to go to work just to escape the constant fighting. As she’s
adjusting a dress she overhears the models in the shop talking about
meeting a rich man and the rich men they’ve already come to know.
Margie gets a break of sorts when an important customer comes in
while the other models are at lunch. Mr. Francois (Porcasi), the
store’s owner, drafts the willing Margie, sending her out to model
a fur for millionaire Raymond Harding (William), who has arrived at
the store with his girlfriend Babsy (Dodd). While Babsy is in the
dressing room trying on outfits, Mr. Francois has Margie model a fur
for Harding. At first Harding hardly takes notice, but when Mr.
Francois has her open up the coat to reveal she’s wearing nothing
but her undergarments underneath, Harding suddenly takes and interest
and is all over her.
When
he hears that Jimmie has canceled their lunch date because of work,
Harding offers to have Margie’s lunch sent in. She orders a
sandwich and a Coke. “I guess you’d call it a Coca-Cola,” she
tells Harding in an obvious allusion to the slang term for cocaine.
Harding also tells Margie about his penthouse with its built-in
swimming pool. Babsy emerges from the dressing room to find her
boyfriend making time with the model and yanks him out of the store,
but not before Harding whispers something to Mr. Francois.
When
Margie goes out with Jimmie that night, he is outraged that she did
the modeling, especially for Harding, who Jimmie describes as “girl
nutty.” He decides to pop the question, telling her that he has
been saving for a store of his own out on Long Island. Margie accepts
the proposal, later telling her mother of her plans.
But
something happens to change everything. Harding, infatuated with
Margie, sends orchids to her mother. When Mom says that she really
doesn’t want them, Alf grabs them to sell for pool money. Sophie
follows Alf into the hall to retrieve the flowers and we hear the
sound of Alf hitting Sophie. She returns to the apartment holding her
hand over her eye. For Sophie, it’s the final straw, especially as
she’s pregnant with her second child. She wants a divorce, telling
Margie that she can get a job and leave the kids for Mom to watch
during the day. Margie, seeing what her sister has gone through, is
now totally soured on the idea of matrimony, and delivers the movie’s
most famous line: "I've made up my mind that anytime I hand
myself over to a man for life, it's cash on delivery."
Unfortunately, the front door is still open and Jimmie has come to
drive Margie to work. He overhears the conversation, and figuring she
no longer wants him to drive her to work, slinks away despondently.
Margie
agrees to help Sophie find a lawyer. They visit the office of A.J.
Dietrich (Wilson). He informs Sophie that a divorce will cost $200.
Margie tells Sophie she will try to find the $200 necessary for the
divorce. She begins by asking the models at work, but it’s no soap.
One tells her that while men give them presents, they would never
gift them with cash. “They’re (the models) allowed about as much
freedom as Airedales on a leash,” she tells Margie. Perhaps, she
adds, Margie could get the money from Mr. Francois. He, too, turns
her down. Margie swallows her pride and visits Jimmie to ask for the
money. She tells him up front that she still means what she said
about marriage and she’s only there as a friend. Jimmie is willing
to give her the money, though, until he asks what it’s for. When
she tells him, he now refuses, accusing her of butting into her
sister’s affairs. Besides, he doesn’t believe in divorce,
especially not with kids around. They quarrel and she leaves.
There’s
one more option left for Margie: Harding. She gets up the nerve to
visit his penthouse, where she finds a wild party going on. We see
Harding lounging poolside in a two-piece suit with a striped top that
really comes across on the screen, especially in black and white, as
totally garish. Earlier we saw him bobbing up and down in the pool
with a drunken female guest on an inflatable toy that looks
suspiciously like as penis. Now he’s resting, telling another
female guest that he’s going to have Babsy sent away on a modeling
jaunt, so they’ll have plenty of time together. When Peterson
(Kinnell), his butler, tells him discreetly of Margie’s arrival,
Harding softly replies, “Serve it here.”
He
greets Margie with the line, “Why not take off your clothes and
stay awhile?” Margie, for her part, is overwhelmed by all this and
seems more than a bit disgusted at the goings-on. Harding has
Peterson show Margie to the den where he pulls out a swimsuit and
kimono for her, and sets up the champagne for Harding’s entrance.
Harding saunters in wearing his own kimono and begins working his
charm. They have several drinks together before she works up the
nerve to ask him for the $200. When she swears to pay it all back,
Harding’s only question is “How?” She replies by offering him
$5 a week from her own salary, to which he asks if she wouldn’t
take it as a gift. Margie may be an innocent, but she’s no fool.
She knows this gift is not a “no-strings” sort of deal, but the
money is important – she needs it for Sophie. “Yes,” she
replies. “If it’s necessary. I suppose that’s the only way you
lend money to girls like me.” “Yes, that seems to be the
customary arrangement,” Harding replies back.
Slowly,
though, we see a transformation beginning to take place. Up until
this time Harding has been plying Margie with champagne to break her
down. But now it’s he who is the one being broken down – broken
down from his seduction, for the liquor has loosened Margie’s
tongue and unfortunately for Harding, made her even franker. She
tells him “marriage is bunk, at least for poor people.” Harding,
taken aback at this display of honesty, replies that he doesn’t
think she would like the high life. “I’ll learn to like it,”
she says; her determination and honesty now giving him second – and
third – thoughts. “I find you very interesting,” he says as he
moves to the piano and begins to play.
“Gee,
you play swell,” she tells him. “On the contrary,” Harding
replies, “I play . . . very badly.” The wolf in him has now been
replaced with the fatherly figure.
The
$200 is as good as in Margie’s pocket when Jimmie bursts in. He
somehow found out what she was up and now confronts the couple with
accusations. Margie tells him to get out. Jimmie raises his hand to
hit her when Harding blocks it. Jimmie retaliates by hitting Harding
right in the stomach. “You hit me a little low,” Harding mumbles
before collapsing on the floor. Margie’s reaction is one of vivid
anger. She tells Jimmie off, as Jimmie assumed the only reason she
visited Harding was for the sex. She tells Jimmie that Harding never
made a move. “That’s the difference between him and you. Now, get
out!”
Jimmie
runs out as Harding’s butler comes in. He calls the doctor, who
calls for an ambulance. The cops also show up to investigate. They
question Margie on the assumption that she and Jimmie were there to
trap Harding. They want her to accompany them to the station, but
Margie asks if she can go to the bathroom to change from the swimsuit
back into her dress. The cops give permission, but once in the
bathroom, Margie makes her escape through a window.
So
now the cops are after Margie and Jimmie. She didn’t get the money
and things really look bad. And here’s where the film goes
completely off the rails. As Margie is comforting Jimmie at her
apartment, there’s a knock at the door. Expecting the police, she
opens the door to reveal Harding’s butler. Mr. Harding is all
right, he tells her. It wasn’t Jimmie, but some bad shrimp he ate
earlier that sent him to the hospital. The butler gives Margie the
promised $200 and leaves. Next to enter is the landlady, Mrs.
McCarthy (Eburne). She informs Margie and Jimmie that Alf won $1,000
in a billiards tournament in Atlantic City plus an additional $500
betting on himself. Everything is once again hunky-dory between Alf
and Sophie, as Sophie has called off the divorce. And that’s not
all the good news Mrs. McCarthy is carrying. She hands Margie an
envelope. It turns out that it’s a letter from Margie’s boss, Mr.
Francois. Enclosed is the $200 she asked to borrow and in the
accompanying letter he says that when she returns to work he will
promote her to model with a raise in wages. It becomes obvious that
Margie and Jimmie will marry as they make up and kiss as the movie
fades out.
Afterwords
Under
18 is an excellent showcase for star Marian Marsh, who gives
a wonderfully complex performance as the increasingly desperate
Margie, a virtuous young woman whose entire world is becoming a
question of choosing between a life of money and one of true
happiness and pressuring her towards a life of moving on from one
rich man to another. She displays both fearless determination and
poignant self-doubt as she builds both suspense and tension over what
lengths she will go to help sister Sophie. Marsh’s elfin
appearance, combined with her gentle acting approach, changes the
mood of the film from unrelentingly dark to one filled with warm
moments. It would be a far harsher film if Bette Davis, Barbara
Stanwyck, or Joan Blondell were given the part. Marsh also makes the
most of her relationship with boyfriend Jimmie, seeing the goodness
and kindness in him that further complicates her choice. Her
Margie learns that while money can buy happiness, as it seemingly
does in the film, it’s love that will conquer all, even in the poor
house.
As
for Warren William, he’s billed fourth in only his third film after
departing Broadway, but the role of Raymond Harding seems as if it
was written with him in mind. No actor is more appealingly sleazy
than William, or more sympathetically so at that. He does a good job
in the limited time he has, using everything in his power to get the
image of Harding as a super lech over with the audience. Although his
portrayal is weakened by a sudden attack of decency at the end, it’s
nonetheless a precursor to the star-billed cads and rouges he played
a little later.
The
rest of the cast is also fine; there’s not a bad performance in the
group. Regis Toomey provides the right balance as Jimmie, his anger
toward the rich tempered by his love for Margie and his despondency
over the possibility of losing her. Another surprise is the
performance of Murray Kinnell as a refined butler, especially if one
has seen Kinnell in his best known role – that of “Putty Face”
in The Public Enemy. Anita Page and Norman Foster,
however, threaten to steal the film in its early moments as the
bickering couple of Alf and Sophie. Their antics in those early
scenes make it even harder to accept their reconciliation in the
final reel, as if we know deep inside that Alf will blow it once
again, that lady luck can’t always be on his side, and being a pool
shark is no dependable way to make a living.
Archie
Mayo’s direction is crisp, keeping the film moving along at a good
pace. Some of his camera placement is inspired, such as the scene
where Margie is approaching Harding’s penthouse. Mayo uses a rather
unusual angle for the building, making it seem foreboding as she
approaches, and in the scene where she rides the elevator up to the
penthouse makes deft use of shadows while keeping the camera on
Marsh’s expressive face. The kicker is when she arrives at the top
and exits to see a party scene that looks like something out of
Dante’s Inferno. All the while he cuts back to Marsh, who looks on
with a mixture of surprise, disgust, and wariness.
Were
it not for the artificial happy ending, Under 18 would
come across much better. It’s a rather unique window into the lives
of the working poor during the Depression and the wolf that is always
at the door. It offers a grim, realistic view of the options
available for women raised in the tenements. This is no escapist
fantasy, at least until the end, but rather the other side of the
world depicted in such films as Gold Diggers of 1933, Gold
Diggers of 1935, and Dames. During the film, the
camera focuses in on the hard facts of life in the tenements:
sleeping on fire escapes on hot summer nights, congested sidewalks
and streets choking with traffic, and apartments with little more
than paper-thin walls so that the neighbors can be heard right
through them.
We
also see Margie and Jimmie on a couple of their dates, which are
depicted as definitely on the unglamorous side. Sometimes he takes
her with him on his deliveries, while other times they sit on the
front stoop next to some fresh garbage talking about love, money and
marriage. We listen in on Jimmie’s hatred for the rich while Margie
is swooning over the life the models lead at work.
What Under
18 has in common with the other films mentioned above,
however, is the depiction of limited choices for women in the
workforce. If not born into money, life is difficult for a working
woman: she can be a clerk, a landlady, or a model. That’s it. Even
physical violence, which occurs when Alf strikes Sophie and Jimmie
goes to hit Margie (only to be stopped by Harding) goes unpunished,
as if it were an inescapable fact of a woman’s life. Most of the
films made during the Pre-Code years make gold digging into a
sympathetic art form, while the rich are portrayed as
pleasure-seeking boobs who deserve to be parted from their cash.
And
while Under 18 has its share of Pre-Code friskiness,
the unrealistic happy ending almost threatens to sabotage all that
has gone on before. Were the film made in 1936, we could simply
ascribe it to dictated changes from the Breen Office. But this was
1931, years before the Code was enforced, and it would seem that the
ending was an inspiration of screenwriters Charles Kenyon and Maude
Fulton for reasons known only to them.
Overall, Under
18 is an entertaining Pre-Code film with two excellent
performances from leads Marsh and William that promise greater things
from them in the future. But while Warren William lived up to his
promise, Marian Marsh fell short, despite many excellent
performances. And her fall from grace has been attributed to Under
18, or rather, the negative critical reaction accompanied by the
poor box office, despite the intense ballyhoo. Marsh, disappointed
and exhausted from her working schedule at Warner Bros. (five films
in 1931 alone), rebelled against the studio, which retaliated by
dropping her option. Her career never fully recovered, as she moved
from studio to studio. While at Columbia, she turned in two great
performances in The Black Room (1935), with Boris
Karloff, and Crime and Punishment (also 1935), with
Peter Lorre. Her movie career ended in 1942 at the age of 28,
starring with Harry Langdon in House of Errors for
PRC. Still, while her star burned bright in the early ‘30s, she
looked to be one of the coming superstars of the film business.
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