Men of the Sky
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Men of the Sky (1931) | |
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Directed by | Alfred E. Green |
Written by | Otto A. Harbach |
Starring | Irene Delroy Jack Whiting Lotti Loder Bramwell Fletcher Armand Kaliz John St. Polis |
Music by | Otto A. Harbach, Jerome Kern, David Mendoza Erno Rapee |
Cinematography | John F. Seitz |
Editing by | Desmond O'Brien |
Distributed by | First National Pictures: A Subsidiary of Warner Bros. |
Release date(s) | June 30, 1931 |
Running time | 71 Minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Men of the Sky (1931) is an All-Talking musical drama film which was produced by Warner Bros. in 1930 and released in 1931. Filming began in July of 1930 and concluded in mid-September.
Contents |
[edit] Production
The original story and music were written by Otto A. Harbach and Jerome Kern. The film was originally intended to be released, in the United States, early in 1931, but was shelved due to public apathy towards musicals. Despite waiting a number of months, the public proved obstinate and the Warner Bros. reluctantly released the film in June of 1931 after making some cuts. The film was released outside the United States (since there was no backlash against musicals outside the United States) as a full musical early in 1931. The film was originally intended to be photographed entirely in Technicolor, but this was dropped midway into production when the studio realized the public was growing sour on musicals. The film was originally titled: "Call of the East" but was retitled before release.
[edit] Synopsis
In this drama, the love affair between an American pilot named Jack Ames (Jack Whiting) and a French spy named Madeleine Aubert (Irene Delroy) is chronicled. Madeleine leaves her American boyfriend to join her father(John Sainpolis), another agent, as a spy for France at an estate in Germany. She is supposed to seduce a German officer (Bramwell Flecther) in order to gain information on a set of secret plans that another spy will steal after landing on the grounds. That spy turns out to be Jack. Madeleine is supposed to signal her compatriot to advance by playing a certain style of song on the piano, but the Germans have found out about the scheme, and Jack is exposed. In the tragic ending, the pair of lovers are led out to a firing squad...
[edit] Songs
- "Every Little While"
- "Boys March"
- "Stolen Dreams"
- "You Ought to See Sweet Marguerite"
- "All's Well with the World"
[edit] Trivia
- This was to have been the first of three of musicals to be written by Otto A. Harbach and Jerome Kern for Warner Bros. Due to the public apathy for musicals, however, Warner Bros. bought out their contract and the team returned to Broadway.
- The public apathy for musicals was so high, that the film was apparently edited in some regions and was exhibited as a song-less drama.
- Warner Bros. did not debut this film in the usual prestigious movie theaters. The film was immediately placed in general release with no fanfare.
[edit] Preservation
No copies of the film are known to exist. The complete soundtrack survives on Vitaphone disks.