Battle of Broadway explained

Battle of Broadway
Director:George Marshall
Producer:Sol M. Wurtzel
Screenplay:Lou Breslow
John Patrick
Story:Norman Houston
Starring:Victor McLaglen
Brian Donlevy
Gypsy Rose Lee
Raymond Walburn
Lynn Bari
Jane Darwell
Cinematography:Barney McGill
Editing:Jack Murray
Studio:20th Century Fox
Distributor:20th Century Fox
Runtime:84 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Battle of Broadway is a 1938 American comedy film directed by George Marshall and written by Lou Breslow and John Patrick.[1] The film stars Victor McLaglen, Brian Donlevy, Gypsy Rose Lee, Raymond Walburn, Lynn Bari and Jane Darwell.[2] The film was released on April 22, 1938, by 20th Century Fox.

Plot

Homer C. Bundy (Raymond Walburn), the president of the Bundy Steel Company of Bundy, Pennsylvania, sends troublesome employees "Big" Ben Wheeler (Victor McLaglen) and "Chesty" Webb (Brian Donlevy) to New York City to break up Bundy's son Jack's (Robert Kellard) engagement to suspected gold digger Marjorie Clark (Lynn Bari). Jack discovers his father's plot, and turns the tables on the brawling steelworkers: he asks gorgeous Linda Lee (Gypsy Rose Lee)--the object of the competitive Big Ben's and Chesty's amorous pursuits—to pretend she's his fiancé, to put the boys off the trail. Trouble ensues when Homer arrives in NYC...and falls for Linda.

Cast

Reception

Critical reception for Battle of Broadway upon its initial release was largely positive.[3] In a 1938 review for the film The New York Times stated "Though it will not be hailed as one of the year's finer historical films and might even be said, despite the riot scenes, to suffer from a ind of timid civilian understatement, the extent of which can only be measured by those who have lived through "the terror" – as we of the Times Square area tend to think of it – "Battle of Broadway" seems to provoke enough of those tolerant, unanalytical audience guffaws to justify its modestly budgeted existence."[4]

DVD Talk gave a favorable review for Battle of Broadway, writing that it was a "Knockabout farce, energetically handled" and that "By the time the movie wraps up with its third or fourth unapologetic big brawl, Battle of Broadways hard-won rough-and-tumble pose becomes positively endearing."[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Battle of Broadway (1938) – Overview . TCM . 2015-10-06.
  2. Web site: Battle-of-Broadway . https://web.archive.org/web/20151011223707/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/84485/Battle-of-Broadway/overview . dead . 2015-10-11 . Movies & TV Dept. . . . Hal Erickson . Hal Erickson (author) . 2015 . 2015-10-06.
  3. News: Bell. Nelson B.. Allan Jones Scores Triumph at Capitol; 'Battle of Broadway' Is Precisely That!: Ovation Given Singer; Film Will Recall Old Formula.. The Washington Post. 23 Apr 1938. .
  4. News: THE SCREEN: Battle of Broadway' Rages at the Rivoli-Other New Films at the Strand and Globe. The New York Times. 25 Apr 1938. .
  5. Web site: Mavis. Paul. This Is My Affair; Battle Of Broadway; Professional Soldier (Fox Cinema Archives Victor McLaglen Triple Feature). DVD Talk. 17 October 2015.