So why go back to the movies of the pre-Code era? What’s the point of discovering and watching these films all these years later? The questions are valid. After all, we’re talking about a brief period that ended almost seventy years ago and counting. Most of the films are unknown and don’t even attract nostalgia buffs, since there’s nothing drippy or sentimental about them. Indeed, the kick of pre-Codes is the opposite of nostalgia. Watching them, we don’t search for the past in the present. Rather, we discover the present in the past. (p. 206-207)

It’s always been hard for me to get into the men of the pre-Code era. Where the woman are freewheeling and dramatic, machismo seems to be the ruling law for men. Rarely do they get to explore their souls and position in society with as much verve as the women.

But LaSalle’s book proves me wrong. Instead of viewing pre-Code movies through a modern lens and seeing them as reductive, LaSalle uses the emergence of many great sound stars in the early 30s– Robinson, Cagney, Gable, etc– as a pivot point between the respectable businessmen from the turn of the century and the carefree playboys of the jazz age to more of a cynical, ironic view of life.

I adore the way LaSalle structures the book. Rather than a straight chronological view of the period, LaSalle looks at the strands of the portrayals, working his way through gangster movies and Barthelmess’ social critiques, finding the truth in those movies and the movies they represent, and moving on.

He starts by prototyping the male silent film hero, from Douglas Fairbanks to Rudolph Valentino and outlining their defining characteristics– their big smiles. Their confidence and forthright nature lack complication, something that the sound revolution finally allowed. The emergence of gangsters as protagonists in the early 30s leads the way for the emergence of more morally questionable men, from Warren William’s scoundrels to Lee Tracy’s admirable hucksters.

LaSalle clearly has the most fun in the book, other than lambasting Al Jolson, in trying to uncover the truth in John Gilbert’s magnificent fall from grace. On John Gilbert:

If [Al] Jolson benefited most from the shift to sound, the biggest casualty was John Gilbert. But to say that isn’t enough. Gilbert’s misfortune was too epic to define in terms of an era. In the nearly one hundred years in which there has been such a thing as movie stardom, no actor of Gilbert’s stature has ever endured such a reversal, such a humiliating turn in his public’s affections. He was the best-paid and most popular actor on the planet, an artist respected by critics and a great screen lover adored by the multitude. It was a sunny day; the birds were singing; then a meteor hit him. […]

Words like “prowess” and “dainty” were the tip-off. What Gilbert faced was not a professional setback. It was a public castration. (p. 20, 22)

For people unfamiliar with pre-Code films, there’s a good list of recommendations to be found here, as LaSalle brilliantly pinpoints the most engaging actors of the time and why they are not just stars of early sound but complete products of their era. Lee Tracy, Warren William, and Richard Barthelmess were at the height of their powers and what they could show onscreen without censorship, and LaSalle correctly highlights their best roles and why their personalities still ring true today.

(Side note: it is odd that Gable is on the cover when the book seems to be more interested in Cagney, Tracy, William and Barthelmess, but I assume that has as much to do with marketing as content.)

Dangerous Men isn’t as strong of a book as Complicated Women, if only because most of the male roles that emerged in pre-Code endured, unlike the stronger female roles that would be neutered by the Production Code. But LaSalle’s playful writing and his expert ability to draw together threads make his portrayal compelling, and a quick, fun read for anyone looking for more information about the pre-Code era.

Notes

  • Reading level: Casual
  • Length: 215 pages, 258 with appendixes and index.
  • Follows LaSalle’s companion book, Complicated Women.

Dangerous Men

This book is available from Amazon.


For more pre-Code book reviews, please go here.


Danny

Danny is a writer who lives with his lovely wife, adorable children, and geriatric yet yappy dog. He blogs at pre-code.com, a website dedicated to Hollywood films from 1930 to 1934, and can be found on Twitter @PreCodeDotCom.

3 Comments

Ben Frey · June 27, 2016 at 4:28 am

A line in your last paragraph says a lot: “…most of the male roles that emerged in pre-Code endured, unlike the stronger female roles that would be neutered by the Production Code.” This goes to the heart as to why the actors spotlighted in the book and your review are rarely seen especially as ‘Pre-Code icons’ (Warren William, maybe.) Men could go on being the same mugs and lugs and con-men that they were in Pre-Code films, but the women had to clean up their morals and ethics, and hide their lingerie.

Judy · June 27, 2016 at 5:04 am

I loved this book, which really helped me to get into pre-Codes, and introduced me to Barthelmess in particular, though it was very hard to find many of the films at the time it was published. He writes so well about John Barrymore as well as the others you mention. I’ve long regretted borrowing this from the library multiple times instead of buying it, since it then went out of print and became wildly expensive secondhand, but I see it’s now out on Kindle, so will at last treat myself to a copy!

Vanessa (@callmeveebee) · June 27, 2016 at 10:29 pm

I read DANGEROUS WOMEN a few years ago and I remember really enjoying it! Since then I’ve wanted to pick up DANGEROUS MEN, but just haven’t gotten around to doing it yet. Too many books, so little time! Maybe now I know that John Gilbert is featured in it, I’ll pick it up relatively soon (I freaking LOVE Gilbert).

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