1940 !!
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Strange Cargo
vonhangman — 18 years ago(March 24, 2008 06:30 PM)
I really enjoyed watching "Strange Cargo" but after seeing it I was amazed to discover that the film was released in 1940.
For a start, it is a pre-code sort of film, in terms of being relatively frank about the physical relationship between Julie (Joan Crawford) and her admirers.
But also, and more-so, the way it was shot, and edited, and scored and for that matter acted all made it seem like a film from the very start of the post-silent era. Without being told you would
never
have imagined it was a film that Clark Gable made
after
"Gone With the Wind."
It was incredible, for me anyway, that the same Production/Direction team of Joseph L. Mankiewicz and Frank Borzage which made "Three Comrades" and "The Shining Hour" could have followed up on these films with something so anomolous. -
JackBluegrass — 10 years ago(September 18, 2015 09:18 AM)
Frank Borzage was one of several "genius" directors of both the silent/sound eras.
He had enough directing experience to pull off expertly a 1940 film with a "pre-code" feel to it.
Borzage's morality tale here is one that a smart movie-goer will be thinking about for a good amount of time. I can see why the Roman Catholic Church's Legion of Decency - 1940-era - banned this film for Catholics when it came out (according to Netflix DVD liner notes).
But, Catholics today will see a hefty dose of morality in the story!
E pluribus unum