1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Early Spencer Tracy in Panama spy thriller, 7 July 2008
Author:
ksf-2 from southwest US
M. G. opens in a restaurant somewhere in France, with the sound of
people singing. Then Marie Galante (K Gallian) on a bicycle rushing off
somewhere.... Lots of people speaking French, and the ship captain gets
a telegram in English, with lots of orders. The movie has been playing
for two minutes and i'm already lost, although it might be my own fault
for forgetting so much of my high school francais. It turns out the
ship cast off while she was still aboard. More francais spoken. Then
we're somewhere in central America, according to the title card, and we
meet Dr. Crawbett (Spencer Tracy), Plosser the nightclub owner played
by the great but sarcastic Ned Sparks (ya GOTTA see him in The Bride
Walks Out 1936 - Hilarious!), spies, and various other suspicious
people. According to Marie, (Ketti Gallian), she just wants to get back
to her homeland. Crawbett and someone who MUST be a spy are sorting out
the people in the nightclub, and that is the beginning of the story.
Galante ends up going in search of a Frenchman who may or may not be
able to help her get home. The screenplay and acting are quite
competent, but the lighting is spotty and poor at times. When the
camera pans around Marie Galante's room, it zooms past posters and
things that would be helpful and interesting to be able to see. It
appears Gallian's film career fizzled, while Tracy's bloomed and took
off. Sharp viewers will also spot Sig Ruman, who plays Brogard. He had
made A Day at the Races and A Night at the Opera with the Marx
Brothers. The spy plot and "foreign" locations (including the Panama
Canal, whether or not we are really there...) make this an interesting,
exotic story, while we try to figure out who are the good guys, and who
are the bad guys.
7 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- Sub-titles in at least three languages would have helped., 24 October 2007
Author:
Leslie Howard Adams (longhorn3708@windstream.net) from Texas
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
And with a title of "Marie Galante" one might suppose that this was
another film about the doings at the castle under one of those Looie
(Roman Number) kings, and Marie was one of the ladies-in-waiting
working to spring the Scarlet Pimpernel or the man in the iron mask out
of the dungeon. One would be wrong. This one is 1934 at the Panama
Canal and the American Commissioner at Cristoforo, General Phillips, is
getting briefed by Ratcliff of Scotland Yard about a mystery man who
may be plotting to blow up the power house and put the whole Pacific
Fleet in dry-dock. His m.o. is that he always works through a woman,
who appears...and disappears...and sometimes her body is found. The
nationality of the man is unknown to Scotland Yard but they have
pictures of him when, in 1914, he was member of the House of Commons
and had a key position at the War Department and important secret files
disappeared; in 1916, under another name, he was the master mind in the
Central European Spy Organization in Paris and two of his
confederates---both women---were caught and shot; next, he was a Llama
in Tibet who put himself as head of affairs in China and things went
badly for all Western Powers; He turned up later as chief engineer of
the Potosi Munition Works and they were blown up; and, when last seen
and heard of, he was the man behind the scenes of a big Communist
uprising in Germany. Ratcliff of Scotland Yard had six photos of the
man but no name. About this time, Dr. Crawbett, from the University of
Wisconsin, pops in to give a report on how well his study of tropical
insects, mosquitoes and diseases is going. (This alone makes this a
watershed moment in movies, as the only other mention of the University
of Wisconsin in film-history came in 1953 when Republic made "Crazy
Legs" starring Elroy "Crazy-Legs" Hirsch...himself.) Ratcliff and
Crawbett go out for a night on the town at the Pacific Gardens where
Helen Morgan (as Miss Tapia or something) sings a torch song. They also
meet a Japanese poet/curio shop owner named Gennosaki Tenoki, but he
has only been a poet since 1933, and, prior to that, he was a
Lieutenant Commander in the Japanese Imperial Navy and, in fact, had
just returned to Panana yesterday from a visit to Japan. They converse
a bit and then the master-of-ceremonies announces that he he now happy
to introduce "a singer that can sing without leaning all over the
piano" and Miss Helen Morgan seems to take offense at his rude
inclusion of her in the introduction of...Marie Galante. She sings a
song half in French and half in her own brand of English, and then Miss
Tapia sends her over to pump information out of Ratcliff (of Scotland
Yard) and Crawbett (U. of W.), while working as a B-girl sipping small
glasses of diluted orange juice. Marie mostly tells them about how put
out she is by being in Panama where nobody speaks French. Crawbett
suggests that Brogard, sitting across the room eyeballing them, perhaps
does since he owns the Paris Bazaar and Botique. But Brogard, with a
furtive nod to Miss Tapia, departs the premises. So she then tells them
of how to come it is she is in Panama against her wishes---something to
do with delivering a Postes Telegraphies at San Briac to a ship and the
ship sailed with her still aboard. Crawbett then makes the mistake of
asking her about her home in San Braic and she says...." Oh, m'sieure,
it is so beautiful" There is the old church where I am confirmed---the
homes of my friends---the flowers---the fields beyond town! Everybody
tell me---Bon jour, Marie! 'Ello, Marie! The gooses go quack, quack,
quack-'ello, Marie! The sheep and the cowses-they call Baa-Baa, Marie -
moo-moo Marie." Marie is indeed enchanting and even inspires Tenoki,
the retired Japanese Naval Commander turned poet, to send her an
example of his work dedicated to her: "Blonde girl resting is like
flower in sunshine. But when she moves in affairs of men she may be
like cat in mischief. Why not be happy to remain a flower." It doesn't
quite scan and sounds like a threat, but Marie liked it. Later,
Teniko's clerk who delivered the poem turns up quite dead what with
having been shot with a two-eight-three automatic and stabbed with a
long, thin knife with a Japanese mark on the handle. Tenoki smilingly
says of the clerk..."he has contrived to get himself murdered in the
canal zone."
I forget what else happens but I'm sure I can watch a Charlie Chan or
Mr. Moto panama-canal film and find out from the stock-footage.
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Marie Galante (1934)
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Early Spencer Tracy in Panama spy thriller, 7 July 2008
Author: ksf-2 from southwest US
M. G. opens in a restaurant somewhere in France, with the sound of people singing. Then Marie Galante (K Gallian) on a bicycle rushing off somewhere.... Lots of people speaking French, and the ship captain gets a telegram in English, with lots of orders. The movie has been playing for two minutes and i'm already lost, although it might be my own fault for forgetting so much of my high school francais. It turns out the ship cast off while she was still aboard. More francais spoken. Then we're somewhere in central America, according to the title card, and we meet Dr. Crawbett (Spencer Tracy), Plosser the nightclub owner played by the great but sarcastic Ned Sparks (ya GOTTA see him in The Bride Walks Out 1936 - Hilarious!), spies, and various other suspicious people. According to Marie, (Ketti Gallian), she just wants to get back to her homeland. Crawbett and someone who MUST be a spy are sorting out the people in the nightclub, and that is the beginning of the story. Galante ends up going in search of a Frenchman who may or may not be able to help her get home. The screenplay and acting are quite competent, but the lighting is spotty and poor at times. When the camera pans around Marie Galante's room, it zooms past posters and things that would be helpful and interesting to be able to see. It appears Gallian's film career fizzled, while Tracy's bloomed and took off. Sharp viewers will also spot Sig Ruman, who plays Brogard. He had made A Day at the Races and A Night at the Opera with the Marx Brothers. The spy plot and "foreign" locations (including the Panama Canal, whether or not we are really there...) make this an interesting, exotic story, while we try to figure out who are the good guys, and who are the bad guys.
7 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
Sub-titles in at least three languages would have helped., 24 October 2007
Author: Leslie Howard Adams (longhorn3708@windstream.net) from Texas
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
And with a title of "Marie Galante" one might suppose that this was another film about the doings at the castle under one of those Looie (Roman Number) kings, and Marie was one of the ladies-in-waiting working to spring the Scarlet Pimpernel or the man in the iron mask out of the dungeon. One would be wrong. This one is 1934 at the Panama Canal and the American Commissioner at Cristoforo, General Phillips, is getting briefed by Ratcliff of Scotland Yard about a mystery man who may be plotting to blow up the power house and put the whole Pacific Fleet in dry-dock. His m.o. is that he always works through a woman, who appears...and disappears...and sometimes her body is found. The nationality of the man is unknown to Scotland Yard but they have pictures of him when, in 1914, he was member of the House of Commons and had a key position at the War Department and important secret files disappeared; in 1916, under another name, he was the master mind in the Central European Spy Organization in Paris and two of his confederates---both women---were caught and shot; next, he was a Llama in Tibet who put himself as head of affairs in China and things went badly for all Western Powers; He turned up later as chief engineer of the Potosi Munition Works and they were blown up; and, when last seen and heard of, he was the man behind the scenes of a big Communist uprising in Germany. Ratcliff of Scotland Yard had six photos of the man but no name. About this time, Dr. Crawbett, from the University of Wisconsin, pops in to give a report on how well his study of tropical insects, mosquitoes and diseases is going. (This alone makes this a watershed moment in movies, as the only other mention of the University of Wisconsin in film-history came in 1953 when Republic made "Crazy Legs" starring Elroy "Crazy-Legs" Hirsch...himself.) Ratcliff and Crawbett go out for a night on the town at the Pacific Gardens where Helen Morgan (as Miss Tapia or something) sings a torch song. They also meet a Japanese poet/curio shop owner named Gennosaki Tenoki, but he has only been a poet since 1933, and, prior to that, he was a Lieutenant Commander in the Japanese Imperial Navy and, in fact, had just returned to Panana yesterday from a visit to Japan. They converse a bit and then the master-of-ceremonies announces that he he now happy to introduce "a singer that can sing without leaning all over the piano" and Miss Helen Morgan seems to take offense at his rude inclusion of her in the introduction of...Marie Galante. She sings a song half in French and half in her own brand of English, and then Miss Tapia sends her over to pump information out of Ratcliff (of Scotland Yard) and Crawbett (U. of W.), while working as a B-girl sipping small glasses of diluted orange juice. Marie mostly tells them about how put out she is by being in Panama where nobody speaks French. Crawbett suggests that Brogard, sitting across the room eyeballing them, perhaps does since he owns the Paris Bazaar and Botique. But Brogard, with a furtive nod to Miss Tapia, departs the premises. So she then tells them of how to come it is she is in Panama against her wishes---something to do with delivering a Postes Telegraphies at San Briac to a ship and the ship sailed with her still aboard. Crawbett then makes the mistake of asking her about her home in San Braic and she says...." Oh, m'sieure, it is so beautiful" There is the old church where I am confirmed---the homes of my friends---the flowers---the fields beyond town! Everybody tell me---Bon jour, Marie! 'Ello, Marie! The gooses go quack, quack, quack-'ello, Marie! The sheep and the cowses-they call Baa-Baa, Marie - moo-moo Marie." Marie is indeed enchanting and even inspires Tenoki, the retired Japanese Naval Commander turned poet, to send her an example of his work dedicated to her: "Blonde girl resting is like flower in sunshine. But when she moves in affairs of men she may be like cat in mischief. Why not be happy to remain a flower." It doesn't quite scan and sounds like a threat, but Marie liked it. Later, Teniko's clerk who delivered the poem turns up quite dead what with having been shot with a two-eight-three automatic and stabbed with a long, thin knife with a Japanese mark on the handle. Tenoki smilingly says of the clerk..."he has contrived to get himself murdered in the canal zone."
I forget what else happens but I'm sure I can watch a Charlie Chan or Mr. Moto panama-canal film and find out from the stock-footage.
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