Boom Town (film)
Boom Town | |
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Directed by | Jack Conway |
Produced by | Sam Zimbalist |
Written by | John Lee Mahin |
Based on | A Lady Comes to Burkburnett in Cosmopolitan magazine (August 1939) by James Edward Grant |
Starring | Clark Gable Spencer Tracy Claudette Colbert Hedy Lamarr |
Music by | Franz Waxman |
Cinematography | Harold Rosson Elwood Bredell (uncredited) |
Edited by | Blanche Sewell Paul Landres (uncredited) |
Production
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Release dates
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Running time
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119 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.6 million[2] |
Box office | $5 million[2] |
Boom Town is a 1940 American adventure film starring Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Claudette Colbert, and Hedy Lamarr, and directed by Jack Conway. The supporting cast features Frank Morgan, Lionel Atwill, and Chill Wills. A story written by James Edward Grant in Cosmopolitan magazine entitled "A Lady Comes to Burkburnett" provided the inspiration for the film.[3] The film was produced and released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Plot
"Big John" McMasters (Clark Gable) and "Square John" Sand (Spencer Tracy) are two down-on-their-luck oil wildcatters who join forces. Without enough money, they steal drilling equipment from a skeptical Luther Aldrich (Frank Morgan). Their well proves a bust and they have to hastily depart when Aldrich shows up with the sheriff to take back his property. The two oilmen team up and make enough money to partially pay Aldrich. To get him to back them for a second try, they cut him in for a percentage of the well. This time, they strike it rich.
When Elizabeth 'Betsy' Bartlett (Claudette Colbert) shows up, McMasters sweeps her off her feet (without knowing that Sand considers her his girl) and marries her. Sand accepts the situation, wanting Betsy to be happy. However, on their first anniversary, she catches her husband dancing with a barroom floozy. As a result, Sand quarrels with McMasters and they flip a coin for the entire oilfield. Betsy leaves too, but returns when she learns that her husband has lost almost everything to Sand and needs her.
Each man goes through booms and busts. Building on his renewed success as a wildcatter, McMasters moves to New York to expand into refineries and distribution, competing against former customer Harry Compton (Lionel Atwill). Seeking inside information about his rivals, he hires away Compton's adviser Karen Vanmeer (Hedy Lamarr), who uses her social contacts and womanly charms to gather industry information.
Meanwhile, Sand loses everything he has built up in South America to a revolution. When he meets McMasters at an oilmen's convention, the two finally reconcile, and Sand goes to work for his old friend. When he suspects that McMasters is carrying on an affair with Karen, he tries to save Betsy's marriage by offering to marry Karen. However, she deduces his motives and declines. When a miserable Betsy tries to commit suicide by taking sleeping pills, Sand decides that the only way to help her is to bankrupt McMasters. Sand loses his costly battle with his former friend and goes broke. It is only when he asks McMasters to give his wife a divorce that the married man finally comes to his senses. Later, McMasters is prosecuted by the government for violating the Sherman Antitrust Act and loses his business. In the end, poor, but happier, Sand and McMasters team up again, with the blissful Betsy looking on. Aldrich supplies them with equipment and the whole cycle begins again.
Cast
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Cast notes:
- Gable's father,William Gable, was an oil-well driller and as a teenager Gable himself worked for his father in Oklahoma, so he was familiar with the subject of this film.[4]
Production
The actress originally considered for the lead role was Myrna Loy, for whom the part was written.[5] It turned out to be the second, and last, pairing of Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable, who had appeared together in It Happened One Night.[5] Gable and Spencer Tracy had also worked together before, in two other films, San Francisco and Test Pilot.[5] Eventually Tracy insisted on the same top billing clause in his MGM contract that Gable enjoyed, effectively ending the pairing. Tracy, in fact, was brooding over his second-billing status during the filming of Boom Town and was reportedly unpleasant to deal with. He especially did not get along with either of the female leads.[4]
Some of the location shooting for the film took place in Bakersfield, California.[5]
Reception
Bosley Crowther of The New York Times praised the scenes involving the oil wells as exciting but found the human part of the story "peters out into repetitious wrangling along monotonous lines."[6] Variety's review was positive, writing: "Unlike many large-budgeted productions carrying multistar setups that tend either to costume background or sophistication for limited appeal, this one breaks out with a dashing, rough-and-tumble yarn of modern adventure that carries all elements for widest audience appeal ... story is repetitious in its cutbacks to new oil fields and gushers, but this fact will be considered unimportant by the customers."[7] Harrison's Reports accurately predicted that the film's star power would make it a big hit, but said the story was "only fairly good" and the plot "somewhat thin."[8] Film Daily called the screenplay "excellent" and wrote that Conway "has furnished an outstanding job of directing, blending the action, love interest and comedy so that interest is held to the end."[9] John Mosher wrote a mixed review for The New Yorker, stating that "when the plot leaves the West and comes East, it grows rather feeble. Western bars, these boom towns and their peculiar architecture and their customs, and the spectacle of the great oil gushers themselves form a substantial background of interest, I should say, which a commonplace plot merely frames."[10]
Boom Town was second only to Gone With the Wind in generating ticket sales for a Clark Gable picture.[citation needed] According to MGM records the film earned $3,664,000 in the US and Canada and $1,365,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $1,892,000.[2]
Awards and honors
Boom Town was nominated for two Academy Awards, for Best Black and White Cinematography and Best Special Photographic Effects (A. Arnold Gillespie, Douglas Shearer).[11] It also placed seventh on Film Daily's year-end nationwide poll of 546 critics naming the 10 Best Films of 1940.[12]
References
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External links
- Boom Town at the TCM Movie Database
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Boom Town at IMDb
- Boom Town at AllMovie
- Boom Town at the American Film Institute Catalog
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- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
- ↑ "Burkburnett, TX" on the Texas State Historical Association website
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 D'Onofrio, Joseph. "Boom Town (1940)" on TCM.com
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "Notes" on TCM.com.
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- Pages with reference errors
- 1940 films
- English-language films
- Articles with unsourced statements from January 2013
- 1940s drama films
- American films
- American drama films
- Black-and-white films
- Buddy films
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- Film scores by Franz Waxman
- Films set in Texas
- Films directed by Jack Conway
- Works about petroleum