Film Review
Carnival Boat features not one
but two stars-in-the-making who would soon become legends in their own
life time: Ginger Rogers and William Boyd. A year on, Rogers
would begin her enduring partnership with Fred Astaire in
Flying Down to Rio (1933);
in 1935, Boyd first took on the role for which he is best known, Hopalong Cassidy, in
the first of a series of popular westerns. The future celebrity
of its two most prominent actors gives
Carnival Boat an interest value it
might otherwise not have, although it does have one or two other
virtues, not least of which are two remarkable action sequences.
Filmed mostly on location in the Sierra Nevada Mountains,
Carnival Boat sometimes feels more
like a documentary than a melodrama, and its depiction of lumber work
in the 1930s confers on it some historical value. The dramatic
highpoint is a thrilling sequence involving a runaway train, which is
almost surpassed by another nail-biting sequence in which the hero
(Boyd) has to clear a log jam (in the original sense of the
term). Whilst Boyd is busy doing all the hard man stuff, Rogers
is playing the glamour girl for all it is worth, rewarding both the eye
and the ear with her sprightly rendition of the song
How I Could Go For You?
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Aware that he is getting too old to run his lumber business, Jim Gannon
has hopes that his son Buck will take over when he retires. But
Buck has other ideas. He has fallen in love with a pretty
showgirl, Honey, and plans to leave the area and start a new life with
her. When he realises how much his father is counting on him,
Buck has a change of heart, just as a series of near-disasters head his
way...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.