Destry Rides Once again, Mr. Smith went to Washington, the decline of Hollywood's studio system Thomas Schaadt considered the 1950s as an inevitable end to the Hollywood film production system, and that logo was the second world war It peaked at the same time as the peak of 472)). However, as in the movies of Destry Rides Again (1939, George Marshall) and Smith Goes To Washington (1939, Frank Capra), in the late 1930s, dissatisfaction and division seeds in this system became clear.
Based on a popular novel of the same name, Mr. Smith (a new thing of Mr. Washington (1939)) A beautiful image of Jimmy Stewart is incorporated into a familiar Western metaphor. A small west town called a bottleneck is corrupt and Sharon's boss has been replaced by a drunkard with a troublesome sheriff managed. The drunkard got drunk and reached the son of a famous lawyer, Destri, in the town. Unlike his father, he is a diplomat who avoids handguns and shows a bottleneck at the parasol, which is a potential awareness of Neville Chamberlain's attitude toward German invasion. Only a year ago in September 1938, Chamberlain declared peace of the time and carried a famous umbrella. The main woman of Destry is Marlene Deitrich, she is a German lady (which is also not a coincidence), her reputation is bad, car owner and town owner lover
Milky lawyer Jimmy Stewart, Tom Destry, Marlene Dietrich, Is there a more romantic match than a French name that is difficult to understand with a German accented singer? Destry Rides includes an unforgettable song (Dietrich's "Look at what the boys will do later") and an unforgettable scene (a fierce battle between Dietrich and Una Merkel). If several lines exceeded the examiner, the movie would have been longer, as when Dietrich won the card and placed the coin on the shirt.
"Destry Rides Again" directed by George Marshall, starring James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich has become a bottleneck in a lawless town managed by a broken salon owner, Brian Donivi. He noticed his disagreement with Tom, a new pacifistist deputy sheriff. Destry, Jr. (James Stewart) Inspired by a Max brand novel of the same name, "Synk Again" is Stewart's first Western film - comedy and music figure - and activates Marlene Dietrich's career I helped. This 1939 movie is a remake feature film - it is a remake of the same name of Tom Mix - ZaSu Pitts in 1932, and it was recreated as "Destry" in 1954. In addition to depicting on a large screen, this story has brought new life to TV and Broadway as well.