Wild Girl

1932

Action / Crime / Drama / History / Romance / Western

2
IMDb Rating 6.4/10 10 287 287

Please enable your VPΝ when downloading torrents

If you torrent without a VPΝ, your ISP can see that you're torrenting and may throttle your connection and get fined by legal action!

Get Expert VPΝ

Plot summary

Salomy Jane, a California mountain girl, is sought after by a number of men in the nearby small town of Redwood City. She is affected when two criminals are pursued by authorities: one for killing a hypocritical mayoral candidate, the other for robbing the stagecoach.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
January 04, 2023 at 02:29 AM

Director

Top cast

Joan Bennett as Salomy Jane
Louise Beavers as Mammy Lou
Marilyn Harris as Anna May
Ralph Bellamy as Jack Marbury
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
741.48 MB
960*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 20 min
Seeds 1
1.34 GB
1440*1080
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 20 min
Seeds 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by AlsExGal 6 / 10

Joan Bennett as backwoods tomboy...

... complete with perfectly styled platinum hair and penciled-in eyebrows. She's lusted after by a wide assortment of men, including Confederate veteran Charles Farrell, gambler Ralph Bellamy (replete in full Snidely Whiplash regalia), and sweaty Irving Pichel. Eugene Pallette is also on hand to provide blustery comic relief and self-deprecating fat jokes.

Director Raoul Walsh frames the film as being viewed through an old photo album, and the opening is a doozy, with each actor shown as a "page" in the album with their name at the bottom, and they each deliver a line or two about their character along with their character's name. It's very awkward, yet memorable. Many scenes also segue via a "page turning" wipe/transition. There's also some nice location shots of the giant sequoias. Otherwise this is a bunch of overheated hooey.

Reviewed by gbill-74877 7 / 10

Not great, but has its moments

"Here was this bandit, a-strippin' these women..." "What?!?" "...of their jewelry." "Oh."

The plot to this pre-Code western is a melodramatic mix of subplots, none of which are terribly satisfying, but there are a few things which made it mildly entertaining:

  • The magnificent California redwoods in Sequoia National Park, where filming took place.


  • The equally magnificent Joan Bennett, flitting about in tight shirts, skinny dipping, and finding love. She's divine. Don't read too much into the title though, it's salacious clearly to sell tickets, and the character is actually modest and virtuous. In fact, it's a little disappointing that the "tomboy" comfortable with climbing atop a moving stagecoach is wearing a dress after falling for a handsome stranger (Charles Farrell).


  • Eugene Palette imitating agitated horses.


  • Raoul Walsh's style of scenes ending with the film turning a page as it's rolling, a neat little effect. He also uses it after the opening credits, when the main actors introduce themselves.


  • Ralph Bellamy's character having the grace to know that the young woman doesn't truly love him and then backing off, telling her she'll know when the right one comes along instead of being aggressive, which is so often seen in these films.


  • The town prostitute (Minna Gombell) brazenly introducing herself as "I'm called a lot of names, by different men," and then later mocking the hypocrisy of the sheriff and the "Purity League" he represents, probably a clever dig at the Catholic League of Decency, who a couple of years later would finally succeed in getting the Production Code enforced.


  • The notable way that for the two crimes committed, the sheriff and a posse capture the men and without any semblance of a trial by jury, take them off to be executed by hanging, and no one bats an eye over this process.

Reviewed by mark.waltz 7 / 10

She prefers trees to men... Well anyway, most men.

Trees are straight and strong the young Joan Bennett exclaims in the unique opening credits which introduces most of the characters of this atmospheric drama with a western feeling. Bennett has been pursued by nearly all of the men in her community, married and single, and has declared her love for none of them. But when Charles Farrell comes along and finds her skinny-dipping, a spark is felt. He's coming to town to seek revenge against a notorious bad man for abusing his sister and this results in him being sentenced to hanging along with the husband of Sarah Padden for stagecoach robbing. it's obvious that a lot of people in town had reasons to want to see the man Farrell is accused of killing dead, and that includes some of the men who wanted then it for themselves. They include gambler Ralph Bellamy (dressed all in black) and the slimy Irving Pichel.

While slow-moving and a bit creaky, this is an enjoyable film if you allow yourself to get past its technical flaws. Eugene pallette is big-hearted and funny as Bennett's wealthy father who brings food to the poor and Louise Beavers, in an unbilled part, makes the most of her role as Bennett's loving companion. The outdoor setting, showing dear, bears and a gorgeous hooting owl, is nicely photographed. Fans of Joan Bennett will barely recognize her here although the toughness that she showed in later rolls is obviously present. Her voice hadn't yet deepened and she was still in her platinum blonde stage.

While Bellamy's character appears to be a villain in the credits, he has a light-hearted attitude in general, as shown in his card game with a group of kids, and is eventually accepting of the fact that he'll never win Bennett. Of the supporting cast, Sarah Padden comes off the best as the tired wife of a bad man she can't escape. This is an intriguing pre-code film that may not quite stand the test of time but has elements that for fans of this era and the terriffic cast will make it quite memorable. The direction by rausch is top-notch and helps pull the film together.

Read more IMDb reviews

5 Comments

Be the first to leave a comment