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Paramount Publix Corp., 1932. Directed by
Ernst Lubitsch. Camera: Gilbert Warrenton. With
Gary Cooper,
Charles
Laughton, George Raft, Jack Oakie, Richard Bennett, Charles Ruggles,
Alison Skipworth,
W.C. Fields, Mary Boland, Roscoe Karns, May Robson, Wynne Gibson, Gene
Raymond, Frances Dee,
Joyce Compton,
Cecil Cunningham, Blanche Friderici, Lucien Littlefield, Berton Churchill,
Clarence Muse, Frederick Santley, John St. Polis, Dewey Robinson, Tom
Ricketts, Effie Ellsler, Margaret Seddon, Ida Lewis, Lillian Harmer, Shirley
Grey, Kent Taylor, Wallis Clark, Harry C. Bradley, Irving Bacon, Ernest
Truex, William V. Mong, Fred Kelsey, Grant Mitchell, Samuel S. Hinds, Tom
Kennedy, Jack Pennick Robert E. Homans, Hooper Atchley, Bess Flowers, Walter
Percival, Gail Patrick, Willard Robertson, Reginald Barlow, Jerry Tucker,
Margaret Mann, Ruby Lafayette, Gertrude Norman, Lydia Knott, Edith Yorke,
Emma Tansey. |
Prologue
Cantankerous tycoon John Glidden, whose relatives and employees
expect him to die shortly, stubbornly refuses to give his fortune to
the squabbling, greedy bunch, and determines to give it instead to
people who might appreciate it. He then decides to give a
million dollars a piece to various people chosen at random from the
phone book.
China Shop
The first recipient of Glidden's money is henpecked Henry Peabody,
who has spent years handing over his wages to his nagging wife.
Because his salary has consistently been docked for breaking china,
Henry gleefully takes the opportunity to smash the entire inventory
of the shop.
Violet
Prostitute Violet Smith receives her money in a bar, then rents
an expensive hotel room and enjoys the luxury of sleeping in a
luxurious bed--without having to keep her stockings on.
The Forger
Forger Edward Jackson, frantically fleeing the police, finds
that he cannot cash his check. He tries every means possible
to borrow on the check or sell it for smaller and smaller amounts of
money. Finally, starved and exhausted, he gives it away in
exchange for a ten-cent bed.
Road Hogs
Emily La Rue and her companion Rollo, ex-vaudevillians, are
over-joyed at their newly acquired fortune. When they purchase
a car, however, it is almost immediately forced off the road by a
"road hog." Their money enables them to take their revenge on
the road hogs of the world by buying a fleet of cars and joyfully
running ill-mannered drivers off the road.
Death Cell
Death-row prisoner John Wallace is distressed to find that his
new money will not save him, but he is comforted to know that his
wife Mary will be financially secure after his death.
The Clerk
Office employee Phineas V. Lambert receives his money and calmly
leaves his desk, walks to the office of the company president, and
unceremoniously gives him "the razzberries."
The Three Marines
Marine Corps private Steven Gallagher and his friends Mulligan
and O'Brien believe that his check is an April Fool's Day hoax.
Because they want to take waitress Marie to a carnival and have no
money to finance the date, they sign the check over for ten dollars
cash to Marie's boss, the owner of the local lunch wagon.
Grandma
The last recipient, feisty Mary Walker, is one of the many
unhappy old women who live at a rest home run by a heartless matron.
The women are not only lonely, but feel useless because they are
prohibited from doing anything other than sitting idly in their
rocking chairs, talking and knitting. With the money, Mrs.
Walker buys the home and gratifies the wishes of its inhabitants by
letting them do all of the chores and making the matron and her
employees simply sit and rock. Impressed with Mary's spunk,
Glidden is apparently cured of his terminal illness and decides to
spend his time at the home with Mrs. Walker, and happily plans for a
romantic hayride with her.
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