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UCLA Film & Television Archive and the Hugh M. Hefner Classic American Film Program present

The Docks of New York / Thunderbolt

Thunderbolt
March 26, 2022 - 7:30 pm


The Archive has postponed in-person screenings in consideration of the current COVID-19 surge. This program has been rescheduled to Saturday, March 26 at 7:30 p.m.
We appreciate your understanding and support as we plan for a safer start to 2022.

 

The Docks of New York

1928

Director Josef von Sternberg's penultimate silent feature (his final silent work, The Case of Lena Smith from 1929, is lost) displays the earliest, strongest evidence of the densely-layered ethereality that would distinguish his later collaborations with Marlene Dietrich. Set almost entirely in a seedy portside tavern where the doomed and desperate carouse, it stars George Bancroft as a brutish steamship stoker whose 24-hour leave becomes a transformational journey of the soul after he rescues Betty Compson’s waif from the chilly waters and the two fall in love. Von Sternberg orchestrates Harold Rosson’s transporting cinematography, Hans Dreier’s textured set design and Helen Lewis’ electrifying editing into an aesthetic crescendo for the silent era.

35mm, b&w, silent, 76 min. Director: Josef von Sternberg. Screenwriter: Jules Furthman. Cast: George Bancroft, Betty Compson, Olga Baclanova.

Live musical accompaniment by Cliff Retallick.

Preservation funding provided by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation

Thunderbolt

1929

If The Docks of New York finds von Sternberg prowling the shadows of a self-contained world, Thunderbolt, his first sound film, finds him moving between worlds. Notorious hood Thunderbolt (an Oscar-nominated George Bancroft) is on the lam as the film opens, while his long-time moll Ritzie (Fay Wray) makes a play for a different future with a young bank clerk who lives with his mom. While Ritzie may yearn for staid routine, there’s no doubt where von Sternberg’s sympathies lie when Thunderbolt sneaks her out to an African American speakeasy teeming with life—and Black talent, including Louise Beavers and singer Theresa Harris. The compare and contrast continues after Thunderbolt lands on death row, where the condemned still form a more fascinating subculture than the straight world has to offer, making Thunderbolt’s final refusal of it, all the more powerful.

35mm, b&w, 91 min. Director: Josef von Sternberg. Screenwriter: Charles Furthman, Jules Furthman. With: George Bancroft, Fay Wray, Richard Arlen. Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive.

Funding has been provided by California Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.