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Greed

 
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Greed

  • Director: Erich Von Stroheim
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama, Marriage Drama
  • Themes: Crimes of Passion, Rise and Fall Stories, Love Triangles
  • Main Cast: Gibson Gowland, ZaSu Pitts, Jean Hersholt, Chester Conklin, Sylvia Ashton
  • Release Year: 1924
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 140 minutes

Plot

Frank Norris' powerful Zola-esque novel McTeague was first filmed in 1915. While filmmaker Erich Von Stroheim would insist that he'd been enthralled by the book since it first came out in 1902, it is more likely that he didn't make the novel's acquaintance until seeing that 1915 film. Whatever the case, Von Stroheim vowed that, if he ever had enough Hollywood clout, he'd produce the "definitive" version of McTeague. After scoring an enormous financial hit with Foolish Wives, he had just that clout, and, in 1923, he began work on what he hoped would his masterpiece.

Stripped to its bare essentials, McTeague tells the story of a brutish, but basically good-natured, miner named McTeague (played by Gibson Gowland), who finds his true calling in life by taking over the practice of a traveling dentist. Setting up shop in San Francisco, McTeague falls in love with Trina (ZaSu Pitts), the daughter of German immigrants. It happens that Trina is the girlfriend of McTeague's best pal Marcus (Jean Hersholt), who is mildly resentful, but ultimately forgiving, when McTeague and Trina are married. Always seeking out an opportunity to better herself, Trina buys a lottery ticket. When the ticket pays off and she wins a fortune, the previously even-tempered Trina undergoes a complete personality change, metamorphosing into a grasping, greedy, miserly shrew, hoarding huge sums of money while her husband must get by on his meager earnings as a dentist. Trina's sudden windfall sparks a change in both McTeague and Marcus, as well; driven to distraction by his wife's avarice, McTeague turns into a violent beast, while Marcus boils with jealousy over losing the now-prosperous Trina to McTeague. Pushed too far, McTeague ultimately murders Trina and escapes to the desert with her money. Appointed a sheriff's deputy, the envious Marcus heads out to bring McTeague in, and the two men catch up with one another in the middle of Death Valley. Their water supply gone, their packhorse dead, McTeague and Marcus begin a fight to the death. McTeague manages to shoot and kill Marcus -- only to discover that Marcus has manacled himself to McTeague. Utterly defeated, he sits benumbed on the scorching rocks, awaiting madness and a horrible death.

Filming at actual locations (the murder scene was shot at a locale where a real murder had occurred, while the sweltering Death Valley sequence was, likewise, made there), Von Stroheim remained doggedly faithful to the Norris original, shooting every page word for word. The end result ran 40 reels, or roughly 10 hours of screen time. Then came the corporate intrigues. Von Stroheim, who had begun the film through the auspices of the old Goldwyn studios, now had to contend with the newly formed Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer regime. Production head Irving Thalberg argued logically that no audience would sit still for ten hours of unrelenting realism. Von Stroheim reluctantly responded by paring his film down to 20 reels, but it was still far too long and depressing for MGM's taste. The director's friend Rex Ingram weeded out two more reels, warning Von Stroheim that "If you cut out another inch, I'll never speak to you again." At this point, MGM, feeling that too much money had already been spent on the project, took McTeague away from Von Stroheim and ordered June Mathis to whittle the picture down to ten reels. It is this version, retitled Greed, that was released to the public in late 1924.

Far from the financial disaster that MGM always claimed it was (the film actually posted a small profit), Greed was still too overpowering for many observers. Critics and audiences were sharply divided, some hailing the film as a work of unbridled genius, others dismissing as "an epic of the sewer." Von Stroheim, angered that his baby had been "butchered," refused to ever see the ten-reel Greed. When viewed today, the film retains its raw dramatic power; the continuity gaps and clumsy transitional titles that once seemed so unforgivable are generally ignored by contemporary audiences. Still, Greed is not a happy, high-kickin' production. Though a rewarding experience, it remains very rough sledding for those accustomed to traditional, conservative entertainment. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Even in its mutilated form, Erich von Stroheim's Greed (1924) remains an intense silent masterpiece. Already notorious for his excesses when Goldwyn Pictures signed him in 1922, Stroheim faithfully adapted Frank Norris's naturalistic novel McTeague, shooting the grim story about a couple's avaricious downfall on location in San Francisco and Death Valley, tripling the original budget. Combining documentary realism with symbolic devices, Stroheim composed McTeague in deep-focus long takes, emphasizing expressive relationships between characters and settings through juxtapositions in a single shot. Stroheim was asked to cut his original nine-hour version to a length releasable in two parts; with Stroheim's blessing, it was reduced to four hours. Goldwyn, however, merged with Metro and Louis B. Mayer Productions to form MGM in 1924; Mayer turned McTeague over to his assistant, and Stroheim nemesis, Irving Thalberg for further edits. The hours of excised footage from the re-titled, 140-minute Greed were destroyed. Still, because of Stroheim's visual style, certain sequences, particularly the Death Valley dénouement, remain almost intact, retaining the story's power despite narrative holes. Greed made a profit, but Stroheim's struggles continued for the rest of his directorial career. Lost portions of Greed have since been reconstructed from numerous stills into a 239 minute version. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

Austin Jewell - August Sieppe; Oscar Gottell - The Sieppe Twins; Tempe Piggott - McTeague's mother; Dale Fuller - Maria Macapa; Hughie Mack - Mr. Heise; Joan Standing - Selina; William Barlow - Minister; James Gibson - Deputy; Cesare Gravina - Zerkow, a Junkman; Frank Hayes - Old Grannis; Jack McDonald - Gribbons; Fanny Midgley - Miss Baker; Erich von Ritzau - Traveling Dentist; Jack Curtis - McTeague's Father; S.S. Simon - Frena; James F. Fulton - Sheriff; Florence Gibson - Hag; Lon Poff - Lottery Agent

Credit

Louis Germonprez - First Assistant Director, Erich Von Stroheim - Director, Joseph Farnham - Editor, Frank E. Hull - Editor, James Brennan - Composer (Music Score), Richard Day - Production Designer, Erich Von Stroheim - Production Designer, William H. Daniels - Cinematographer, Benjamin F. Reynolds - Cinematographer, Ernest B. Schoedsack - Cinematographer, Samuel Goldwyn - Producer, Erich Von Stroheim - Producer, Cedric Gibbons - Set Designer, Joseph Farnham - Intertitle Writer, Erich Von Stroheim - Intertitle Writer, June Mathis - Intertitle Writer, Erich Von Stroheim - Screenwriter, June Mathis - Screenwriter, Frank Norris - Book Author

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Wikipedia: Greed (film)
Top
Greed
Directed by Erich von Stroheim
Produced by Irving Thalberg
Louis B. Mayer
Written by June Mathis
Erich von Stroheim
Frank Norris (novel)
Starring Gibson Gowland
Zasu Pitts
Jean Hersholt
Dale Fuller
Tempe Pigott
Sylvia Ashton
Chester Conklin
Joan Standing
Jack Curtis
Music by William Axt
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) December 4, 1924
Running time 140 min.
239 min. (restored)
Country  United States
Language Silent film
English intertitles

Greed (1924) is a dramatic silent film. It was directed by Erich von Stroheim and starring Gibson Gowland, Zasu Pitts, Jean Hersholt, Dale Fuller, Tempe Pigott, Sylvia Ashton, Chester Conklin, Joan Standing and Jack Curtis.

The plot follows a dentist whose wife wins a lottery ticket, only to become obsessed with money. When her former lover betrays the dentist as a fraud, all of their lives are destroyed. The movie was adapted by von Stroheim (shooting screenplay) and Joseph Farnham (titles) from the 1899 novel McTeague by Frank Norris. The onscreen credit for June Mathis was strictly a contractual obligation to her on the part of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (the parent studio), as she was not actually involved in the production.

Contents

Production

The story of the making of the movie has become a Hollywood legend. The story had been filmed twice before by Hollywood film studios: first in 1916 under the title McTeague starring Broadway star Holbrook Blinn, and then as a five-reeler in 1917 under the title Life's Whirlpool directed by Lionel Barrymore and starring his sister Ethel. Under the aegis of the Goldwyn studio, von Stroheim attempted to film a version of the book complete in every detail. To capture the authentic spirit of the story, he insisted on filming on location in San Francisco, the Sierra Nevada mountains, and Death Valley, despite harsh conditions.

The result was a final print of the film that was an astonishing ten hours in length, produced at a cost of over $500,000 — an unheard of sum at that time (though Stroheim's 1921 film Foolish Wives was publicized by Universal as costing over a million)[1]. After screening the full-length film once to meet contractual obligations[2], Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the studio that acquired Goldwyn during production, forced von Stroheim to edit the film to a more manageable length, and, with the assistance of fellow director Rex Ingram and editor Grant Whytock, he reluctantly trimmed the film to about four hours. The film was then removed from von Stroheim's control and cut further, despite his protests. Even key characters were removed from the final version so that it could be screened in a reasonable time frame. Existing prints of Greed run at about two hours and twenty minutes. The hours of cut film were destroyed by a janitor cleaning a vault who thought they were not important film rolls and threw them in an incinerator (although it appears that much of it survived until at least the late 1950s), and this film is known as one of the most famous "lost films" in cinema history. The released version of the film was a box-office failure, and was fiercely panned by critics. In later years, even in its shortened form, it was recognized as one of the great realistic films of its time. Rare behind-the-scenes footage of Greed can be seen in the Goldwyn Pictures film Souls for Sale.

In 1999, Turner Entertainment (the film's current rights holder) decided to "recreate", as closely as possible, the original version by combining the existing footage with still photographs of the lost scenes, in accordance with an original continuity outline written by director Erich von Stroheim. This restoration runs almost four hours. The re-edit was produced by Rick Schmidlin. (Other classic films with missing footage include Orson Welles's The Magnificent Ambersons, Frank Capra's Lost Horizon, George Cukor's A Star Is Born and von Stroheim's Queen Kelly). In 1991, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Cast

Uncredited

Trina and McTeague
  • James F. Fulton as Prospector Cribbens
  • Cesare Gravina as Junkman Zwerkow
  • Frank Hayes as Charles W. Grannis (The Modern Dog Hospital proprietor)
  • Austen Jewell as August Sieppe
  • Hughie Mack as Mr. Heise (harness maker)
  • Tiny Jones as Mrs. Heise
  • J. Aldrich Libbey as Mr. Ryer
  • Reta Revela as Mrs. Ryer
  • Fanny Midgley as Miss Anastasia Baker
  • S.S. Simon as Joe Frenna
  • Max Tyron as Uncle Rudolph Oelbermann
  • Erich von Ritzau as Dr. Painless Potter
  • William Mollenhauer as Palmist
  • William Barlow as The Minister
  • Lita Chevrier as Extra
  • Edward Gaffney as Extra
  • Bee Ho Gray as Extra and Knife Thrower used in saloon scene
  • Harold Henderson as Extra
  • Florence Gibson as Hag
  • James Gibson as Deputy
  • Oscar Gottell as A Sieppe twin
  • Otto Gottell as A Sieppe twin
  • Hugh J. McCauley as Photographer
  • Jack McDonald as Placer County Sheriff
  • Lon Poff as Man from the Lottery Company
  • Erich von Stroheim as Balloon vendor
  • James Wang as Chinese cook

References

  1. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0015881/trivia
  2. ^ Patrick Robertson: Film Facts, 2001, Billboard Books, ISBN 0-8230-7943-0

External links


 
 
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