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The Wild Party

  • 1929
  • Passed
  • 1h 17m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
663
YOUR RATING
Clara Bow and Fredric March in The Wild Party (1929)
In celebration of Pride, we recognize these unsung heroes of LGBTQ+ film history and the movies that changed the face of the film industry forever.
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Wild girls at a college pay more attention to parties than their classes. But when one party girl, Stella Ames, goes too far at a local bar and lands in trouble, her professor must rescue he... Read allWild girls at a college pay more attention to parties than their classes. But when one party girl, Stella Ames, goes too far at a local bar and lands in trouble, her professor must rescue her. Gossip linking the two escalates until Stella proves that she is decent by shielding an... Read allWild girls at a college pay more attention to parties than their classes. But when one party girl, Stella Ames, goes too far at a local bar and lands in trouble, her professor must rescue her. Gossip linking the two escalates until Stella proves that she is decent by shielding an innocent girl and winning the professor's respect.

  • Director
    • Dorothy Arzner
  • Writers
    • Samuel Hopkins Adams
    • E. Lloyd Sheldon
    • George Marion Jr.
  • Stars
    • Clara Bow
    • Fredric March
    • Marceline Day
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    663
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dorothy Arzner
    • Writers
      • Samuel Hopkins Adams
      • E. Lloyd Sheldon
      • George Marion Jr.
    • Stars
      • Clara Bow
      • Fredric March
      • Marceline Day
    • 18User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Unsung Heroes of LGBTQ+ Film History
    Clip 5:20
    Unsung Heroes of LGBTQ+ Film History

    Photos52

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    Top Cast21

    Edit
    Clara Bow
    Clara Bow
    • Stella Ames
    Fredric March
    Fredric March
    • James Gilmore
    Marceline Day
    Marceline Day
    • Faith Morgan
    Shirley O'Hara
    Shirley O'Hara
    • Helen
    Adrienne Dore
    Adrienne Dore
    • Babs
    • (as Adrienne Doré)
    Joyce Compton
    Joyce Compton
    • Eva Tutt
    Jack Oakie
    Jack Oakie
    • Al
    Jack Luden
    Jack Luden
    • George
    Phillips Holmes
    Phillips Holmes
    • Phil
    Alice Adair
    Alice Adair
    • Mazie
    • (uncredited)
    Kay Bryant
    • Thelma
    • (uncredited)
    Marguerite Cramer
    • Gwen
    • (uncredited)
    Ben Hendricks Jr.
    • Ed
    • (uncredited)
    Amo Ingraham
    Amo Ingraham
    • Jean
    • (uncredited)
    Jean O'Rourke
    • Ann
    • (uncredited)
    Russ Powell
    Russ Powell
    • Pullman Car Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Arthur Rankin
    Arthur Rankin
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Raymond
    • Baolam
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Dorothy Arzner
    • Writers
      • Samuel Hopkins Adams
      • E. Lloyd Sheldon
      • George Marion Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.2663
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    Featured reviews

    7springfieldrental

    Clara Bow First Talkie

    Actress Clara Bow, so confident and frolicking in her silent films, looked upon talkies with trepidation. With no stage experience, Bow relied on her visual spunkiness to mesmerize the public. The Brooklyn born and raised actress felt her accent and a slight stammer had the potential of slamming her film career shut when she was placed before a recording device. One of Hollywood's top female silent movie stars faced an uncertain future when she appeared in a Paramount Pictures' early talkie, April 1929 "The Wild Party."

    Dorothy Arzner was given the director's assignment to handle the skittish Bow. After her successful directorial debut in March 1927's 'Women of Fashion,' Arzner directed three more silents before Paramount offered her the "The Wild Party." When Bow heard herself on playback after she was given a brief screen test talking into a microphone, the actress said, "How can I be in pictures with a voice like that?" Assured she was fine, Bow was handed an 100-page script she had to memorize within two weeks before filming. On the set, the opening days were difficult for her. Today's viewers can readily witness her lack of confidence and uneasiness in the new medium. She immediately hated talkies. "They're stiff and limiting," Bow remarked. "You lose a lot of your cuteness, because there's no chance for action, and action is the most important thing to me."

    She found herself on the sound stage more conscious about where the microphone was than delivering her lines. Arzner came up with the idea of suspending the microphone on the end of a fishing rod (one of many reports crediting a number of people, including Lionel Barrymore, of innovating the first boom mic) and having it follow her. The results were better, but the actress occasionally looked up to spot the mic. "We had quite a time in the beginning," Arzner remembered, "because to be aware of the pantomime which she was accustomed to, then have words to remember, was very difficult for her."

    Playing opposite Bow was actor Frederic March, in only his second credited feature film. A banker turned actor, he first appeared on the Broadway stage, then turned to Hollywood in the late 1920s. In the film, he's a professor at an all-women's college who falls for Bow, even though her behavior is opposite of his. She's equally attracted to him, but several adventures occur placing roadblocks in their relationship. March ended up as one of cinema's most respected actors, nominated by the Academy five times for Best Actor, earning two wins.

    Paramount premiered "The Wild Party" with a special public appearance by Bow at the 4,200 seat Brooklyn Paramount Theatre. Ever a comic, she said in a short speech before the movie played, speaking in her heavy New York City accent, "I hope youse all prouda me." Variety didn't see anything particularly wrong with her voice, stating "it was good enough to survive the transition to sound." But another critic lambasted her, describing her voice possessing a "harsh tonal quality that is not very easy on sensitive eardrums." Her talking debut, however, was a financial success as the public continued to envelop her engaging personality.
    5JenniferA585

    Clara's first talkie

    I'm going to have to disagree with the person who said you should watch it without the sound. You can tell its a early talkie and that all of the actresses are trying very hard to make the transition. Clara Bow was a sensational actress but she had a very hard time with sound. Its a cute film if you don't over analyze it too much. And its fun to hear what Clara sounded like. You can kind of hear her Brooklyn accent if you listen really hard. It is cheesy but its 1929! You weren't allowed to do anything in 1929! Clara is great and its unfortunate that she retired by the time she was 27. The Wild Party is about girls who don't take college seriously until Clara, who's kinda like the queen bee, meets Frederic March, who is her professor. Its fun to see what life may have been like in the early years of sound. Clara was so talented and beautiful.
    7Philipp_Flersheim

    Much better than the rating led me to expect

    I was surprised by how much I enjoyed watching 'The Wild Party'. It is not a brilliant film, but it is much better than I expected after having looked at some of the reviews here and having tried a couple of other early talkies (though none as early as this one). So what did I like about it? First of all Clara Bow of course. She comes across just as well as on silent film; in fact, I think she managed the transition to talking pictures excellently. Some contemporary and later reviewers disliked her New York accent. I don't, though admittedly English isn't my first language and I am no good at recognising regional accents. Her voice itself - occasionally criticised too - is perfectly alright as far as I am concerned. Her acting style is natural, not overdone - at least after the first couple of scenes, where she looks a bit nervous. All in all she is credible as a college student. The other female actors do very well, too. Most dialogue (again, after the actors got the first one of two scenes behind them) sounds fine - far better than the stilted and unnatural lines in the few talking scenes in 'Lonesome' for example, which came out only one year before 'The Wild Party'. The plot is nice enough. There are some enjoyable twists and turns and a reasonably satisfying conclusion. I am saying 'reasonably satisfying' because this conclusion involves the male lead actor, Fredric March, who I think was miscast in the role of professor Gilmore. He is supposed to be very much focused on academia and research, but that does not mean that he absolutely has to be quite so stuffy, boring and downright unfriendly (he does not even greet, let alone welcome the students in his new course). It beats me why all the girls go crazy about him.

    'The Wild Party' is of course also interesting because it shows, if not what all-women colleges were like in the late 1920s, then at least how the general public assumed students and professors to behave. My, how things have changed! There is this professor, Gilmore, who saves the character played by Clara Bow from being gang raped by a group of drunks. His reaction? He says he worries about his position at the college. A moment later he passionately kisses Clara. THAT is what would make him worry today. Evidently the general public thought it was fine for members of faculty to have romantic relations with students (even though the college is implied to have frowned upon this kind behaviour). Well, at any rate, I liked 'The Wild Party'. It is definitely the most enjoyable early (i.e. Pre-1933) talkie I have watched so far. I recommend it.
    6ricardojorgeramalho

    Clara Bow and Fredric March

    The Wild Party, scandalously translated into Portuguese as Louca Orgia (Crazy Orgy), is a curiosity from the early days of sound, which stands out for three relevant aspects.

    The first is the leading role of Clara Bow, the greatest sex symbol of American cinema in the 1920s, who here made the perfect debut to talkies, revealing a fiery, fluent, even devilish interpretation, with an energy and independence that makes us understand why she was the muse of men in the 1920s. A striking personality that completely dominates the film.

    On the other hand, we have Fredric March, in only his second credited film (the first being The Dummy, a comedy from the same year, with Ruth Chatterton), who begins a brilliant career, almost at the same time as Clara Bow ends hers in 1933, whether due to her marriage in December 1931 to Rex Bell, with whom she would have two children in the following years, or due to schizophrenic crises, which would even lead to her hospitalization in the late 1940s.

    The third interesting fact is the direction of Dorothy Azner, one of the rare female directors of the time, who had debuted in 1927 with the silent film The Queen of Fashion, and would go down in history as the first woman to direct a sound film (Manhattan Cocktail, in 1928, only partially spoken). The Wild Party was her first fully sound film. She would still direct 15 more films, until prematurely ending her career in 1943, at only 46 years of age.

    The film is a romantic comedy, set in a girls' school, where a student and a teacher fall in love and begin a secret relationship, against the school's strict rules.
    6CinedeEden

    Early Clara Bow Feature

    This film was not box office poison as people flocked to the Theater to hear the "IT" girl talk for the first time. During filming of the feature to capture clara bows voice as she moved they straped the mic on a fishing pole creating the boom mic we know today. It is so interesting to see college girls in the 1920s its such a fascination maybe because Im college aged as the time im writing this review. Clara bows voice is not what you expect, i feel like people expected something cute, and squeeky kind of like jean Harlow. While this is a very early talkie you can see many actors including bow still act as if it were a silent picture.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie is credited with the first use and invention of the "Boom Mic." Dorothy Arzner had a tech put the microphone on the end of a fishing pole and had the tech follow the actors to capture the sound.
    • Quotes

      James Gilmore: Have you ever seen the college from here? It's beautiful isn't it? Have you ever thought why it's there? Fifty or sixty years ago, a great woman suffered and slaved to build it. She braved the ridicule of her friends and the abuse of her contemporaries to bring a true freedom to women. Others have given their best to it because they have the same ideals. And what has happened to their ideal? You and others like you have turned the college into a country club for four years. Four years that you don't know how to occupy better. You haven't the slightest idea what true freedom means. Instead, you jazz around glorying in sham freedom. Life to you is just one wild party. You have no aim. All you want is cheap sensation.

      Stella Ames: It's not true.

      James Gilmore: Now be honest, why did you go to that roadhouse tonight?

      Stella Ames: [defiantly] Because I wanted to.

      James Gilmore: [sarcastically] Superb reason. Because you wanted to. You fairly compel my respect. Because you wanted to. You risked scandal, expulsion; you involve me in a messy adventure that might cost me my job...

      Stella Ames: I didn't ask you to come after me.

      James Gilmore: Is that all it means to you?

      [starts to depart]

      Stella Ames: [pulling him back] I'm sorry I said that. Why do you hate me so?

      James Gilmore: Hate you? How could I hate you when I would have killed for you?

      [they embrace]

    • Alternate versions
      Paramount also released this movie in a silent version with film length of 1848m.
    • Connections
      Featured in Clara Bow: Discovering the It Girl (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      My Wild Party Girl
      (1929) (uncredited)

      Music by Richard A. Whiting

      Lyrics by Leo Robin

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 6, 1929 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Çılgın Gençlik
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 17m(77 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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