Passing Fancy (1933)
2/10
A Pedestrian Film Where Nothing Of Much Interest Transpires.
20 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Viewed on DVD. Restoration = four (4) stars. We've all been there: struggling to find the pause button in the dark on your player's remote so you will not miss anything when you are momentarily away from your viewing area. Well folks, it's not a problem with this movie. Just keep it running; when you return you will find you have missed nothing of significance! This is because nothing of significance appears to occur in this film which seems fixated on trivia, fleas (or lice), and fans. Although the actors sure try to build re pore and empathy with viewers, the director seems satisfied with the notion that trivia, fleas, and fans will carry the day. Not really! Staying with acting for the moment, it is (for the most part) first rate and you have likely seen (or will see) many of these actors before (or again)--as members of the director's acting company or, more likely, from the ranks of the studio's contract players). But the actors face a losing battle struggling with a dull script, having to scratch and fan themselves with numbing (pun intended) regularity, and less-than-inspired direction. (The plot is among the missing and the ending is flat out ridiculous!) The artificiality of a studio bound production (except for one outdoor scene) is embarrassingly obvious with small sets for both interiors and "exteriors." Cinematography suffers from the absence of deep focus. Costumes rarely change; some characters wear the same costume; it looks like the actors may have had to provide their own wardrobe. Intertitles and subtitles often occur faster than the speed of speed reading. The piano score is fine, but it's lively nature can not reanimate dead trivia. Restoration is not there yet: distracting deterioration artifacts often occur at what seems to be where reel changes took place. Criterion graphic artists are still having fun frustrating the viewer by making a game of how to turn subtitles (and the piano score) on/off. Bottom line: A padded-out featurette that goes nowhere--very slowly. WILLIAM FLANIGAN, PhD.
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