Cavalcade (1933)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC | 4:3 | 720x480 | 4500 kbps | 4.0Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps
01:51:00 | USA | Drama, Romance, War
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC | 4:3 | 720x480 | 4500 kbps | 4.0Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps
01:51:00 | USA | Drama, Romance, War
A cavalcade of English life from New Year's Eve 1899 until 1933 seen through the eyes of well-to-do Londoners Jane and Robert Marryot. Amongst events touching their family are the Boer War, the death of Queen Victoria, the sinking of the Titanic and the Great War.
Director: Frank Lloyd
Cast: Diana Wynyard, Clive Brook, Una O'Connor, Herbert Mundin, Beryl Mercer, Irene Browne, Tempe Pigott, Merle Tottenham, Frank Lawton, Ursula Jeans, Margaret Lindsay, John Warburton, Billy Bevan, Desmond Roberts, Dickie Henderson, Douglas Scott, Sheila MacGill, Bonita Granville, Richard Quine, Harry Allen, Frank Atkinson, Lionel Belmore, Ted Billings, Adele Crane, Howard Davies, Mary Forbes, Betty Grable, Dannie Mac Grant, Lawrence Grant, Stuart Hall
On New Year's Eve as 1899 is ending Robert and Jane Marryot a well-to-do London couple, bittersweetly toast the new century with their two small boys, Joey and Edward, and their servants, Alfred and Ellen Bridges, as both Robert and Alfred are leaving the next day to fight in the war against the Boers in South Africa. After the men leave, the boys play war games with little Edith Harris, the daughter of Jane's friend Margaret, while Jane and Ellen worry about their husbands. Later, as no news of the men has been received, Margaret, to cheer Jane up, takes her to see a musical show. The martial music saddens Jane, but the show is interrupted with the announcement that the South African town of Mafeking, where Jane's brother Jim and other Englishmen have been hemmed in by the Boers, has been relieved, which causes great jubilation in the theater. Upon his return to London, Alfred announces that he has purchased a London pub from another soldier so that his mother-in-law Mrs. Snapper can live with him, Ellen and their little daughter Fanny. As he and Robert celebrate their return to their families, news of Queen Victoria's illness is heard in the streets. Her death is felt by many as a personal loss. Later, Robert is knighted in virtue of his war record. In 1908, Jane and Edward, now a student at Oxford, visit Ellen and Fanny. Alfred, whom Ellen has said is injured to hide his chronic drunkenness, which has threatened to ruin them, comes in drunk. After he calls Jane a snob and throws the doll Jane brought for Fanny, Fanny runs out and joins celebrants dancing in the street. Alfred tries to retrieve her, but he is run down and killed by a fire truck as Fanny obliviously continues to dance. In 1909, by the seashore, Jane runs into Ellen and Fanny, who has just won a dance competition, while Edward walks with Edith and confesses his love for her. On April 14, 1912, Edward and Edith celebrate their honeymoon on a cruise ship in the Atlantic. Although Edith is somewhat reserved about the future, they are both thankful for their moment of happiness, unaware that their ship, the R.M.S. Titanic , will shortly sink. After war is declared in 1914, Joey is excited and anxious to join the army, while Jane, greatly agitated, refuses to drink a toast. Before going to France, Joey recognizes Fanny dancing in a club and surprises her in her dressing room. In 1918, Fanny, now starring in a musical comedy, confesses to Joey, on leave and visiting her dressing room again as she prepares for her cue, that she loves him; however, she refuses his proposal of marriage, saying that although their love affair has been great fun, she is not sure that they would be happy or that his mother would approve, and that they should wait until he returns. The day of the armistice, Ellen visits Jane and, after revealing the affair, which she has learned about from reading Joey's letter to Fanny, demands that Joey marry Fanny. Taken aback, Jane castigates Ellen and says she never interferes with Joey's affairs, then expresses regrets about the changes that the century has brought. Just then she receives a message that Joey has died and faints as celebrations begin in the street below. Jane then joins the celebrants in a dazed state. The following passing years bring political controversies, social upheavals and societal changes. Fanny sings the new hit "Twentieth Century Blues" at a club. On the eve of the new year of 1933, Robert and Jane, now an elderly couple, toast the future. Robert, optimistic as usual, and Jane, still reserved, acknowledge the great adventure their life together has been and drink to each other, to the past and future of England, to "the spirit of gallantry and courage that made a strange heaven out of an unbelievable hell," and to the hope that England "will find dignity and greatness and peace again." Outside, "Auld Lang Syne" is sung in the street below as bells ring in the new year. Robert and Jane walk out to their terrace, kiss each other and look on
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