This is one of those films that going in I really didn’t care for but in the end it grew on me. Twentieth Century ends up being one of those films that’s really funny once you get past some of its shortcomings. It’s not only got entertaining dialogue, but it’s got a great performance from John Barrymore.
To start off, the film sets the tone right away, if not at a good pace, but nonetheless, you know this is a comedy. My favorite lines before Barrymore graces the screen come from Roscoe Karns, ever delivering those sarcastic one liners. In fact he and Walter Connolly show once again how important the supporting cast is. They’re supposed to be buffoonish but they have to be entertaining and that Karns and Connolly pull off magnificently. Karns the drunkard always at Barrymore’s bidding and Connolly as Barrymore’s loyal friend, forever getting fired and always on the verge of a heart attack.
Breaking down the film and reading the script definitely helped me stay focused throughout the story, otherwise I got bored somewhere in between. From Carole Lombard’s shrieks and the lack of a better audio track, the film tends to lag once the story moves on the train, and this is precisely when it should feel as if it were speeding up.
Lombard was a problem for me and I noticed it more so after reading the script. Had this been the first film of hers I had seen then perhaps her performance may not have bothered me as much. But when you go into a screwball comedy to see the queen of screwball, and it’s not just that you heard, you’ve seen her at her best, you go into the film with high expectations. This I believe is what the problem was for me. Her performance here isn’t bad, it’s just not great, and as I’ve mentioned she almost comes off as if she’s trying to act like Jean Harlow. In fact, I think Harlow might’ve been better in this, and I say that simply because I think I could tolerate Harlow’s whining, but I couldn’t for Lombard. It’s not that Lombard can’t play a spoiled princess because she has done it beautifully before, it’s just that this spoiled brat is completely unlikable. And while that might be on purpose, there should be something charming about her, and I couldn’t find it.
The only good thing about Lily being unlikable is that it makes sense that she ends up with Jaffe in the end. But even that’s a bit off because while Jaffe is unbearable, Barrymore has so much fun with him that you like Jaffe, you want him to get what he wants in the end, but then you wonder how he could put up with Lily. Barrymore is perhaps the most enjoyable thing out of this film. To watch his facial expressions go from patient to serious to melodramatic is all hilarious. He is such an actor and then when he has to go under disguise he says he can’t believe he’s sink so low as to become an actor. He’s comical and entertaining every bit of the way.
I couldn’t say that Twentieth Century is one of my favorites but it’s certainly isn’t bad or as unwatchable as I deemed it back years ago the first time I watched it. There’s a great cast, a fantastic lead in John Barrymore, but mostly it’s got a funny script, the one thing that holds the film together. It’s not like the screwballs that would come later on, but it certainly laid the groundwork for the genre in time to come.
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