Monday, October 12, 2015

It Happened One Night (1934)

IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
Relate class discussion/text to screening:
     In 1934, the Production Code was created and limited what could and could not be shown to film viewers. Many changes that came about from the Production Code involved changes to women's clothing, sexuality and relationships. Ellie Andrews', Claudette Colbert, outfits are not as racy as pre-code. There are more subtle hints at sexuality and relationships and morals, of the viewers, would not be affected by the film. This film contains "screwball" comedy because both Colbert and Clark Gables' characters exchange witty remarks. Andrews also challenges traditional roles of women by running away from her father and not accepting help from Peter Warne, Gable.


Related article:
     Tim Dirks writes and edits for an AMC Filmsite. This website gives the background and the story of It Happened One Night. Dirks quotes It Happened One Night as being "one of the greatest romantic comedies in film history... It is considered one of the pioneering 'screwball' romantic comedies of its time" (Dirks, n.d.). Dirks also finds the film appropriate and a modern "reversal Cinderella story" for the time. It Happened One Night, based off of Samuel Hopkins Adams' "Night Bus" (1933), won five Academy Awards including best picture, best actor, best actress, best director, and best adaptation.

Dirks, T. (n.d.). It happened one night (1934). Retrieved October 9, 2015, from   http://www.filmsite.org/itha.html



Apply the article to the film:
     Dirks' review applies to the film because he mentions many of its accomplishments and successes. Dirks mentions It Happened One Night being the "pioneering 'screwball' romantic comedy." This relates to the film because Claudette Colbert's character, Ellie Andrews, and Clark Gable's character, Peter Warne, often exchange witty remarks. Also, as previously noted, Andrews runs away from her father and, at first, does not want to accept any help from Warne, thus challenging traditional roles or views of women.


Critical Analysis:
     Personally, I enjoyed the film much more than I thought I was going to. The witty remarks and the connection between Coblert and Gable made the film enjoyable and very realistic. It Happened One Night was a revelation for the time period and had to be cut and to fit the new standards. Frank Capra, director of the film, was able to portray aspects of the film while providing the standards. With the Production Code coming out the same year as the film, 1934, Capra managed to make the film enjoyable for the viewers who were used to Pre-Code films.
     

Checklist for plagiarism:
1) ( x ) I have not handed in this assignment for any other class. 


2) ( x ) If I reused any information from other papers I have written for other classes, I clearly explain that in the paper. 
3) ( x ) If I used any passages word for word, I put quotations around those words, or used indentation and citation within the text. 


4) ( x ) I have not padded the bibliography. I have used all sources cited in the bibliography in the text of the paper. 


5) ( x ) I have cited in the bibliography only the pages I personally read. 


6) ( x ) I have used direct quotations only in cases where it could not be stated in another way. I cited the source within the paper and in the bibliography. 


7) ( x ) I did not so over-use direct quotations that the paper lacks interpretation or originality. 


8) ( x ) I checked yes on steps 1-7 and therefore have been fully transparent about the research and ideas used in my paper.

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