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IMDbPro

Man's Castle

  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 18min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.1/10
2.1 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young in Man's Castle (1933)
DramaRomance

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaCharming vagabond Bill takes young, unemployed Trina into his depression camp cabin. Later, just as he convinces showgirl Fay La Rue to support him, Trina discovers she's pregnant.Charming vagabond Bill takes young, unemployed Trina into his depression camp cabin. Later, just as he convinces showgirl Fay La Rue to support him, Trina discovers she's pregnant.Charming vagabond Bill takes young, unemployed Trina into his depression camp cabin. Later, just as he convinces showgirl Fay La Rue to support him, Trina discovers she's pregnant.

  • Dirección
    • Frank Borzage
  • Guionistas
    • Jo Swerling
    • Lawrence Hazard
  • Elenco
    • Spencer Tracy
    • Loretta Young
    • Marjorie Rambeau
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.1/10
    2.1 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Frank Borzage
    • Guionistas
      • Jo Swerling
      • Lawrence Hazard
    • Elenco
      • Spencer Tracy
      • Loretta Young
      • Marjorie Rambeau
    • 39Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 24Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos33

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    Elenco principal22

    Editar
    Spencer Tracy
    Spencer Tracy
    • Bill
    Loretta Young
    Loretta Young
    • Trina
    Marjorie Rambeau
    Marjorie Rambeau
    • Flossie
    Glenda Farrell
    Glenda Farrell
    • Fay La Rue
    Walter Connolly
    Walter Connolly
    • Ira
    Arthur Hohl
    Arthur Hohl
    • Bragg
    Dickie Moore
    Dickie Moore
    • Joey
    Harry Akst
    • Piano Player
    • (sin créditos)
    Harvey Clark
    Harvey Clark
    • Cafe Manager
    • (sin créditos)
    Helen Jerome Eddy
    Helen Jerome Eddy
    • Mother
    • (sin créditos)
    R. Henry Grey
    R. Henry Grey
    • Headwaiter
    • (sin créditos)
    Leonard Kibrick
    Leonard Kibrick
    • Baseball Team's Catcher
    • (sin créditos)
    Carl M. Leviness
    Carl M. Leviness
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (sin créditos)
    Kendall McComas
    • Slades
    • (sin créditos)
    Etta McDaniel
    Etta McDaniel
    • Dressing Room Maid
    • (sin créditos)
    Tony Merlo
    • Waiter
    • (sin créditos)
    Harold Miller
    Harold Miller
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (sin créditos)
    Edmund Mortimer
    Edmund Mortimer
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Frank Borzage
    • Guionistas
      • Jo Swerling
      • Lawrence Hazard
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios39

    7.12.1K
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    10

    Opiniones destacadas

    8Irene212

    "No female has to starve in a town like this."

    As other reviewers have noted, this is an unjustly neglected Depression-era film. Directed by Frank Borzage (two Oscars) and written by Jo Swerling (Leave Her to Heaven, The Westerner, Lifeboat, etc.), it is a tough-minded, well-structured and -realized move about denizens of a New York City shantytown. They're grifters, beggars, and women forced into prostitution, but they're a community of people both good and bad, with loyalties as complex as any group's.

    Perhaps primary among this movie's many admirable qualities is the contrast between Spencer Tracy's character, Bill, and Loretta Young's Trina. He tough-talking, physically aggressive, and evidently fearless-- but Bill is not the character who gives this film its steely sense of survival. While he blusters, Trina actually hangs tough (if that term can be applied to a character so ladylike). Her devotion to him is obvious, and complete. When she becomes pregnant, she says she will raise it herself if he wants to leave. Such is the dignity of Loretta Young's performance (at age 20) as a very simple, even simple-minded character, that she seems neither weak or dependent, but rather a woman who recognizes happiness when she finds it, and love, and who has learned the hard way that it's worth holding on to because it doesn't come around often, and what's rare is precious.
    71930s_Time_Machine

    An engaging serious and thoughtful drama

    This is a curious but wonderfully acted love story. The protagonists are not your typical love-struck young romantic couple but complicated broken people just about surviving the poverty of living in one of the Hooverville shanty towns of 1932's New York. There's not a lot of humour in this drama but that doesn't make it at all miserable and depressing. It's not like a badly written naïve play where happiness blooms in the face of adversity - it's more thoughtful than that but is nevertheless quite uplifting.

    Spencer Tracy's character, Bill is the absolute opposite of a romantic hero. He is such a well written character played so well by Spencer Tracy that we really don't really know what he is like, who he is or what he's done. We would however love to find out who is really there behind that façade or how he got like that. On the surface he seems to be an unpleasant battle-scared shell of a man incapable of expressing any emotion, feelings or even sense of being part of society.

    Loretta Young's 'Trina' could not be more different. She is from a different place to Bill, she is from a world that disappeared when Wall Street crashed three years ago and is a complete stranger to the world Bill seems so comfortable in. She longs for love and longs for the impossible dream of a happy life in this upside down world. Loretta Young's almost impossible prettiness adds to the tragedy and pathos of her character who seems so lost, so unable to cope with the life she now has to live. Bill is her lifeline and she's not going to let go. She throws herself into the fantasy of happiness with him despite being treated like his slave, despite the constant emotional cruelty and despite Bill having a fling with the local show-girl. If this story were written today, she would be the archetypical battered, mentally and physically abused wife, not leaving her abusive husband because she knows deep down that he loves her.

    This has the feel of being a really good drama that you'd pay good money to watch live in a cramped theatre. It's a mature and surprisingly subtle look at how love - if indeed it is love, can happen in the most unlikely of places. Although it is quite stylised, especially the camp which doesn't look as awful as I suspect in reality it was, as a motion picture it is excellent. Director Frank Borzage creates an enclosed real little world inhabited by real people which plays with your emotions. Sometimes you're hoping Trina and Bill will stay together and live happily ever after - sometimes you're hoping something or someone will separate them because you can see that it's a destructive relationship. It's also beautifully filmed and although it gets a little slow at times is still entertaining and stays in your mind long after the final credits.
    10lqualls-dchin

    One of the essential Depression dramas

    Unfortunately, this film has long been unavailable (as other posters have noted), but this is one of the essential dramas of the Great Depression, a lyrical and touching drama of love set in a shanty-town. It features performances by Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young that are just about the finest of their careers, and it's a surpassing example of how the director, Frank Borzage, was able to create an almost fairy-tale aura around elements of poverty, crime, and horrendous social inequity, which just proves that how truly romantic and spiritual his talents were. This film shows how love survives amidst squalor and desperate need, and it is totally life-affirming. This is a real masterpiece of the period, and is a movie that deserves to be more widely known.
    10Greta-Garbo

    Young and Spencer star in the finest film of the pre-code era

    It's a shame this movie is so hard to get your hands on in the US. I found it through a rare video dealer, and it was certainly worth it. This is, without a doubt, the best film made during the pre-code era, and the finest film of the 1930s. Masterful director Frank Borzage made wonderful films about the Depression, and with MAN'S CASTLE he created a fairy tale amidst the hardships of the era.

    Loretta Young and Spencer Tracy have a wonderful chemistry between them, and they help make this movie a wonderful romance. Young's Trina is sweet and hopeful, while Tracy's Bill is gruff and closed-off. The dynamic between the character creates one of the most difficult, but in the end rewarding relationships on film.

    MAN'S CASTLE is the most soft-focus pre-code film I've seen. Borzage uses the hazy and dreamy technique to turn the squatter's village where Bill and Trina live into a palace. The hardships of the Depression are never ignored, in fact they're integral to the film. But as Borzage crafts the film as a soft focus fairy tale, the love between the characters makes the situation seem less harsh. It makes the film warm and affectionate.

    MAN'S CASTLE is the crowning achievement of the pre-code era. If only more people could see it.
    8AlsExGal

    Borzage treads familiar ground here

    Bill (Spencer Tracy) and Trina (Loretta Young) meet on a park bench during the depth of the Great Depression where Trina admits she has not eaten in two days - she is homeless and jobless like so many others. Bill is dressed in a tuxedo, she thinks he is rich. He invites her to eat a sumptuous meal at a fine restaurant. But it turns out he is broke and manages to bluster and threaten his - and her - way out of trouble with the restaurant. They very shortly end up lovers, living together in a shack in a homeless encampment of other forgotten men and women. Lots of complications that you have probably seen in other precode films ensue.

    This movie was a lot like other Borzage films, in particular the director seemed like he was trying for a redo of the earthbound parts of Lilliom to some extent with traces of Seventh Heaven - A poor, lonely girl falls head over heels for a swaggering lay about who seems, from the outside, to use and mistreat her and have no appreciation for her. But her love sees past his cloddish behavior and fulfills her so completely that, for her, the domestic life she makes with him is bliss.

    The casting is what makes the difference in this film. As opposed to Lilliom's Charles Farrell, Spencer Tracy is believable as someone who could throw a punch and knock somebody out and never give full throated - or even half throated - praise to Young's character, yet there is tenderness under that rough and seemingly uncaring exterior. Likewise, when Young moons after Tracy, the screen lights up like Times Square. That makes all the difference in terms of how much we're likely to be invested in her love for a guy who doesn't really deserve it (though it's also true that she domesticates/redeems Tracy a lot more over the course of Man's Castle).

    The supporting cast is excellent too. Arthur Hoyl is the aptly named Bragg who lusts after Young and tries to get her by fair means or foul. Marjorie Rambeau is a hardened perpetually drunken woman whose problems probably started a long time before the Great Depression started. Columbia stalwart Walter Connolly is an ex preacher living in the encampment who is quite gentle and fatherly with the other residents to the point that I wonder how he got there and how he stopped being a man of the cloth.

    I'd highly recommend this one, which has only recently been restored.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Loretta Young and Spencer Tracy began a torrid love affair that lasted about a year. Young ended the relationship ostensibly due to not being granted absolution because she was dating a married Catholic.
    • Errores
      Spencer Tracy wears his wedding ring throughout the film.
    • Citas

      Trina: Gosh, even birds can't fly all the time. They get tired and have to come home.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Surprise!
      Sung by Glenda Farrell

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    Preguntas Frecuentes14

    • How long is Man's Castle?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 20 de noviembre de 1933 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • A Man's Castle
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Columbia/Sunset Gower Studios - 1438 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Productora
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 18min(78 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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