The Scarlet Letter
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Robert G. Vignola
Colleen Moore
Hardie Albright
Henry B. Walthall
Cora Sue Collins
Alan Hale
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In 1642, Hester Prynne stands with her baby daughter Pearl before a hostile Puritan crowd in the town square of Boston, accused of adultery. When Hester refuses to reveal Pearl's father, she is sentenced to wear a scarlet "A" on her chest, a cloth brand that will label her as an adulterer, for the rest of her life. Later that day, Hester is visited by Pearl's father, Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, a handsome young minister with a spotless reputation. Although Arthur begs Hester to allow him to expose his "sin," Hester insists that he remain silent and serve his congregation. Unknown to Hester, her elderly husband, Dr. Roger Prynne, who had left America two years before and was presumed drowned at sea, has just returned to Boston and has witnessed her public humiliation. Roger, using the alias of Dr. Roger Chillingworth, moves in with an unsuspecting Arthur, then reveals himself to his wife. After swearing vengeance on Pearl's father, Roger forces Hester to promise that she will keep his identity a secret. Eventually Roger deduces that Arthur is Pearl's father and starts to practice a form of mental torture on him, playing on his guilt and driving him toward physical collapse. At the same time, Hester's worthiness as a mother is questioned. With Arthur's help, Hester maintains custody of the five-year-old Pearl but, ironically, must deliver her to Arthur for regular catechism lessons. Unable to endure any longer Roger's cruel treatment of Arthur, Hester begs her husband to end his revenge, but he refuses. Angry, she breaks her vow, telling a delirious Arthur about Roger's true identity and insisting that she and the minister sail away together the next day. Shortly before their departure, however, Hester learns that Roger has booked passage on the same ship. As Arthur is about to preside over his last Boston wedding, he sees Roger in the crowd and, overcome, rips off his shirt and reveals a self-inflicted "A" brand on his chest. Finally freed from his secret shame, Arthur collapses, kisses his daughter and dies.
Director
Robert G. Vignola
Cast
Colleen Moore
Hardie Albright
Henry B. Walthall
Cora Sue Collins
Alan Hale
Virginia Howell
William T. Kent
William Farnum
Betty Blythe
Al C. Henderson
Jules Cowles
Mickey Rentschler
Shirley Jean Rickert
Flora Finch
Dorothea Wolbert
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Scarlet Letter (1934) - Colleen Moore in the First Sound Version of The Scarlet Letter on DVD
Vignola's The Scarlet Letter was a prestige production, relatively speaking, for Larry Darmour's Majestic Producing Corporation--also commonly known as Majestic Pictures--a short-lived venture in the mid-1930s. Although it was shot on a low budget compared to the major studios, the costumes and settings are mostly convincing, and James S. Brown, Jr.'s photography is every bit as good as that found in big studio productions of the time. If anything, the film looks better today than popular studio releases of the era such as MGM's Mutiny on the Bounty (1935), precisely because it was less financially successful and its negative was thus less heavily used.
But the whole enterprise falls apart once the actors open their mouths. Colleen Moore may have been a talented comedienne, but here she never quite achieves the dramatic intensity that the role of Hester Prynne requires, nor does she succeed in projecting the inner strength of her character. Hardie Albright is even weaker as the Reverend Dimmesdale. But not all the blame can be placed on the actors; in general, the director makes them speak too slowly and distinctly, and much of the drama is undercut by consistently flat line delivery. Why should we assume that people in olden times always spoke pompously, even in intimate moments? Vignola also doesn't make sufficient use of the film medium to suggest the characters' inner conflicts through gesture and facial expressions. Even at 73 minutes the film becomes a chore to watch, particularly during the too-frequent Laurel and Hardy-style comic relief. Seeing films like this makes one sigh nostalgically for the gangster films of the early Thirties, with their lively street slang and pop psychological tragedy--now there was an original and wholly American art form.
For those seeking superior adaptations of The Scarlet Letter, Victor Sjostrom's silent 1926 version starring Lillian Gish is easily the best of the lot. Not only is Lillian Gish predictably the better actress, but I suspect that this version works precisely because it's silent and thus circumvents the problem of having actors recite Hawthorne's dialogue. I for one am also curious to see Wim Wender's 1972 German-language adaptation, which will soon appear on DVD.
While the Vignola film itself earns low marks and remains little more than a historical curio, the Image Entertainment DVD boasts an excellent transfer based on Robert Gitt's UCLA Film and Television Archive restoration. According to Sam Sherman, the film's current distributor, the original camera negative was practically untouched when he purchased the rights to the film. It's not difficult to see that this is the case, since the black-and-white image has fine detail and contrast, making it stand apart today from most films during that era, which tend to look more dupey and battered. There are only a few minor speckles and scratches on the print; otherwise it is pristine. My main complaint is that Sherman has replaced the Majestic Pictures title card with his own Signature Films logo, compromising the film as a historical artifact. Also, the hastily designed cover art on the disc's case makes it look like a cheap public domain knockoff, which it most emphatically is not.
Sherman also provides an oddball commentary track in which he reads excerpts of letters from the film's stars, talks about his experiences as a film distributor, and has trouble pronouncing the word "ignominy" when he stumbles across it in a trade review. Although it's not terribly informative about the film itself, Sherman's commentary has, shall we say, a certain anthropological appeal. Other special features include a photo gallery and marvelously campy reissue trailer that makes the film look more like Ed Wood than Nathaniel Hawthorne. (Madman's Torture! Shameless Lust!) As for the film itself, whatever historical value it may have is trumped by its exceptional condition, making the DVD a recommended purchase for those building a systematic collection. High school students who are understandably terrified by Hawthorne's tortuous prose will also score a better quiz grade renting this plodding but relatively faithful account instead of Roland Joffe's racy 1995 "free love conquers all" version starring Demi Moore and Gary Oldman.
For more information about The Scarlet Letter, visit Image Entertainment. To order The Scarlet Letter, go to TCM Shopping.
by James Steffen
The Scarlet Letter (1934) - Colleen Moore in the First Sound Version of The Scarlet Letter on DVD
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Onscreen credits misspell Mickey Rentschler's name as "Rentchler." According to a news item in Hollywood Reporter, The Scarlet Letter was to be the first production of Larry Darmour's "newly organized" Globe Pictures Corp. Filming was to begin at Darmour's Hollywood studio on April 1, 1934. No review, release chart, screen credit or other source, however, refers to Globe Pictures Corp. as the production company for this film. A Hollywood Reporter production chart includes Alma Chester in the cast, but her participation in the final film has not been confirmed. The Scarlet Letter has been filmed many times, including a 1909 Kalem Pictures short; a 1917 Fox production, directed by Carl Harbaugh and starring Mary Martin and Stuart Holmes (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1911-20; F1.3874); a 1926 M-G-M picture, directed by Victor Seastrom and starring Lillian Gish and, as Roger, Henry B. Walthall (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30; F2.4836); a 1950 CBS television broadcast, produced by Worthington Minor for Studio One, starring Mary Sinclair; a 1954 NBC television broadcast, adapted by George Faulkner for Kraft Theatre, starring Kim Stanley; and a 1979 public television production, starring Meg Foster.