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An American Tragedy (1931)
In director Josef von Sternberg's romantic drama, adapted
from Theodore Dreiser's 1925 novel of the same name (based on the
real-life murder of 20-year-old Grace Brown by Chester Gillette in
upstate New York in 1906) - with tragic consequences (later remade
as A Place in the Sun (1951)):
- the son of street evangelists, socially-ambitious
yet poor Clyde Griffiths (Phillips Holmes) moved to upper state
New York to accept a lowly shirt factory worker job arranged through
his wealthy uncle Samuel Griffiths (Frederick Burton); he became
smitten with the family's beautiful debutante-socialite Sondra
Finchley (Frances Dee), while also illegally dating his plain-looking,
hard-working co-worker Roberta "Bert"
Alden (Sylvia Sidney)
- the dilemma: "Bert's" pregnancy, somewhat
solved when during a vacation trip to the Adirondacks with her as
they took a rowboat ride, he acted strangely but then vowed to her
that he had decided to marry her for honor's sake: "It's nothing
now. I'm alright. Just leave me alone. I brought you up here to drown
you, but I'm not going to do it now. Just stay where you are. Nothing'll
happen to you. I'll marry you. I'll go through with it. Just leave
me alone....Stay where you are. Don't come near me!"; confused
by his statements, she got up in the boat to comfort him, lost her
balance, the boat overturned, and she accidentally drowned when he
didn't swim back to rescue her
Fateful Boat Accident - Drowning of "Bert"
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- the scene of the idyllic lake party (attended by
Clyde and Sondra) where many other debutante couples were drifting
and gliding along in a number of slow-moving boats, while police
authorities were closing in on their suspect Clyde; as the loving
couple sat in a boat on the lake, they were startled by the ominous
sounds of gunshots (first a single shot, then two more) coming
from the woods where officers had assembled - it was one of the
earliest and most effective uses of off-screen sound
- the grueling courtroom sequences with much expository
histrionics, including Clyde's cross-examination by District Attorney
Orville Mason (Irving Pichel) and ultimately, his guilty verdict
of first-degree murder with execution in the electric chair
- Clyde's execution was prefaced by a jailhouse scene
(through the cell bars) with his mother Mrs. Asa Griffiths (Lucille
LaVerne), when Clyde admitted that he wasn't really "innocent" -
he could have saved "Bert"
but didn't because he wanted her dead: "Mother, come here, close.
I'm gonna tell you something I couldn't tell the court. I didn't kill
Roberta, but when she fell in the water, I could have saved her. Even
when she went down for the last time, I could have saved her. But I
didn't. I swam away, because in my heart, I wanted her to die...I wanted
to tell the jury, Mother, but I couldn't. I-I was too ashamed. But
that's just the same as killing her, isn't it? But I'm not a murderer,
Mother"; his mother took the blame: "It's not your fault,
Clyde. We never gave you the right start. We brought you up among ugly,
evil surroundings, and while we were trying to save the souls of others,
we were letting you go astray. We never taught you to be brave and
fight sin like a man'; she urged him to face his just punishment bravely
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Clyde with Sondra (Frances Dee)
Clyde Also Dating Roberta or "Bert" (Sylvia
Sidney)
In Love With Sondra at Lake Party
Clyde's Courtroom Trial
Final Jailhouse Scene - Clyde with His Mother
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