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Flamingo Road

United States

1949

94 Min
Black and White
English
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Michael Curtiz

PROD Jerry Wald

SCR Robert Wilder, Edmund H. North, Sally Wilder

DP Ted McCord

CAST Joan Crawford, Sydney Greenstreet, Gladys George, Virginia Huston

ED Folmar Blangsted

MUSIC Max Steiner

Synopsis

Carnival dancer Lane Bellamy finds herself stranded in a southern town ruled by corrupt political boss Titus Semple. Lane becomes romantically involved with sheriff Fielding Carlisle, a weakling whose career is being driven by Titus. Seeing Lane as a liability to his own political ambitions, Titus mounts a campaign to get her driven out of town. She finds she can’t get a job and even gets arrested on a trumped-up morals charge. Released from jail, Lane finds work as a “hostess” at Lutie-Mae’s road house, where she meets Dan Reynolds, another member of the town’s political machine. They marry and move to a home on Flamingo Road, the town’s social pinnacle. Their marriage is soon marked by scandal when a drunken Carlisle visits Lane at home one evening and shoots himself. —IMDb

Director

Original

Michael Curtiz

Michael Curtiz was one of Hollywood’s most prolific and colorful directors. Born to a well-to-do Jewish family in Budapest, he ran away from home at age 17 to join a circus, then trained for an acting career at the Royal Academy for Theater and Art. He worked as a leading man at the Hungarian Theatre before directing stage plays and then films. His first cinematic effort was Az Utolsó Bohém (1912), which was also the first feature-length film ever made in Hungary. Curtiz soon moved on to the more progressive Danish film industry, returning to his homeland in 1914 and serving a year in the Austro-Hungarian infantry before resuming his film career. While it may be arguable that Curtiz was Hungary’s finest director, he was certainly its busiest, making no fewer than 14 films in 1917, most of which starred his first wife, actress Lucy Dorraine. When the Hungarian film industry was nationalized by the new communist government in 1919, Curtiz packed his bags and headed for Sweden… read more

Wall

Displaying 1 wall posts.
Picture of Cheila Sousa

Cheila Sousa

30Dec12

I'm confused here, in one of the last scenes of the film, why did he got shot in his arm and died instantly?

  • Picture of locust furnace

    locust furnace

    15Jan13

    i think he was supposed to have shot himself in the head...the movie has a number of continuity issues (like when joan is singing in the beginning and her mouth doesn't move but in the next shot it does) :(

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