The Four Feathers (1929 film)

The Four Feathers is a 1929 American war film directed by Merian C. Cooper and starring William Powell, Richard Arlen, Clive Brook and Fay Wray.[1] The film is the third of numerous film versions of the 1902 novel The Four Feathers written by A. E. W. Mason.

The Four Feathers
Film poster
Directed byMerian C. Cooper
Lothar Mendes
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Produced byDavid O. Selznick
Written byHope Loring
Howard Estabrook
John Farrow
Julian Johnson
Based onThe Four Feathers
1902 novel
by A. E. W. Mason
StarringFay Wray
William Powell
Noah Beery Sr.
Clive Brook
Richard Arlen
Music byWilliam Frederick Peters
CinematographyRobert Kurrle
Merian C. Cooper
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Edited byErnest B. Schoedsack
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • June 1929 (1929-06)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

As children, Harry promises to marry Ethne, but she consents only if he will dress as a soldier. When Harry is still a child, his father tells him stories about the Crimean War, including one where a runaway soldier is spurred into suicide by Harry's father, who sent him a white feather to show his disapproval of cowardice.

As a young man, Harry joins the army and is engaged to Ethne. His best friends are Durrance, Trench, and Castleton. Harry receives a telegram that their regiment is being deployed in Sudan, and he resigns from the army. His friends and Ethne find out why Harry resigned and give him four white feathers. Harry's father also disapproves, and gives him a pistol and tells him to shoot himself. Harry decides to act courageously in front of his friends in order to get them to take back their feathers, and travels to Sudan.

In Sudan, Trench has been captured by the enemy. Harry saves him, and Trench takes back the white feather. Harry stops a mutiny and saves Castelton from an ambush. Ethne and Harry get back together.

Cast

Theodore von Elzt in The Four Feathers

Production

The picture has the distinction of being one of the last major Hollywood pictures of the silent era. It was also released by Paramount Pictures in a version with a Movietone soundtrack with music and sound effects only.[2][3] The studio considered making it a full talkie, and acquired the dialogue rights to the story for an additional $2,500 on top of the silent rights for which they had paid $12,500.[4]

The book the film was based on, The Four Feathers (1902), was one of the only books in Cooper's possession while he served as a volunteer for the Polish resistance in Kościuszko's Squadron. Cooper found the book inspirational. Kamran Rastegar, associate professor of Arabic and comparative literature at Tufts University, noted several parallels between Cooper's life and that of the protagonist of Four Feathers: both were born into military families, expelled from naval colleges, voluntarily enlisted, and escaped from military prisons. Cooper embraced the ideology both of the masculine ideal and the colonial idea that white men had a right to rule over others.[5]:48–49

Cooper, Shoedsack, and Shoedsack's wife, Ruth Rose, traveled to Tanzania and Sudan to shoot parts of the film in 1927. Cooper wrote "Two Fighting Tribes of Sudan" for a 1929 National Geographic article using material from the expedition.[6]:48–49 Film from the expedition was interweaved with parts shot on sets in Hollywood. Actors were not transported to Sudan, which helped reduce filming costs. Four Feathers was one of the first films to use this technique.[7][8] Cooper oversaw trapping hippopotamuses for a scene where they stampede into a river, and three people died in the process. After a few native villagers went home during the trapping of hippos, Cooper beat "every native he could find."[9]:166[6]:53–55 Cooper observed the baboons for three months before capturing them, and his notes filled 800 pages.[9]:167 Cooper also put baboons on a suspension bridge over a river and cut it down in order to film them trying to swim to safety.[6]:53–55 Back in California, the producers built a large camp between Palm Springs and Indio to shoot the actors themselves in fight scenes. Cooper and Shoedsack hired African-Americans from Los Angeles to stand in for Hadendoan Sudanese men.[6]:56

Adolph Zukor, Paramont studio head, insisted on the film being silent, though directors wanted it to be a talkie. The film was billed as the "last of the big silent films" even though it had a soundtrack and sound effects.[8] According to Thomas Schatz, producer Selznick saved the film from disaster by conducting retakes and reediting the film after its initial preview.[10] Cooper requested that Selznick stay off of the set, and Selznick complied. However, Cooper was supposed to approve of Selznik's edits, but was away during postproduction of The Four Feathers. He disliked the new takes.[9]:174–175

Criticism

Peter Limbrick, assistant professor in film and digital media at the University of California, Santa Cruz, noted that Four Feathers is a masculine adventure that values power above other virtues and excludes women.[6]:29 Limbrick also noted that the way the film used African-American extras in California to stand in for Hadendoans in Sudan reflected the way white settlers like Cooper viewed their position in society in the United States as mirroring that of the British colonialists invading Sudan.[6]:56–57 Cooper's comments to others while abroad showed that he viewed all black people as racially inferior, a settler superiority that leads to the narrative found in The Four Feathers, which is "responding less to the facts of the land than to preexisting colonial visions of it, and disavowing indigenous habitation and meaning."[6]:58 Jeffrey Richards referenced how the characters of the young soldiers fulfilled the "Imperial hero" archetype: tall, thin, and mustached.[11]

Kamran Rastegar notes that Cooper's Feversham shows resentment and anger when reincorporated into the military and reunited with Ethne. Rather than transforming from a coward to a hero, Feversham seems to be a hero who "has only now found recognition for what he always had been."[5]:52–53 According to Rastegar, Cooper's Feversham improved on colonial forms of masculinity by having him display "a brooding sense of ressentiment."[5]:53–54 Fear of "a corruption of masculinity" is a constant theme in this and other versions of The Four Feathers; the fantasy of redemption through service to an empire leads to "a revalorization of" colonialism.[5]:66

Accolades

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

References

  1. Hall, Mordaunt. "New York Times: The Four Feathers". NY Times. Retrieved July 22, 2008.
  2. IMDB entry
  3. McNeil, H. N., ed. (January 5, 1929). "Paramount Reports 'The Four Feathers' Without Dialogue". Movie Age. Vol. 7 no. 7. Minneapolis, MN: Associated Publications Inc. p. 15. ISSN 0006-8527.
  4. Brant p.61
  5. Rastegar, Kamran (2015). "Colonialism, Memory, Masculinity: The Four Feathers and the Redemption of Empire". Surviving Images: Cinema, War, and Cultural Memory in the Middle East. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199390168.
  6. Limbrick, Peter (2010). "Playing Empire: Settler Masculinities, Adventure, and The Four Feathers (1929)". Making Settler Cinemas. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-28703-1.
  7. Smith, Dinitia (August 13, 2005). "Getting That Monkey Off His Creator's Back". The New York Times. Retrieved January 16, 2019.
  8. James V. D'Arc and John N. Gillespie (2000). ""Creater Info" - Merian C. Cooper papers". Prepared for the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Provo, UT. Retrieved January 16, 2019.
  9. Vaz, Mark Cotta (2005). Living dangerously: The adventures of Merian C. Cooper, creator of King Kong (1st ed.). Villard. ISBN 1400062764.
  10. Bansak, Edmund G (October 9, 2003). Fearing the dark: the Val Lewton career. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0786417099. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  11. Richards, Jeffrey (May 22, 2016). Visions of yesterday. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138994089.
  12. "AFI's 100 Years...100 Cheers Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved August 14, 2016.

Bibliography

  • Bryant, Roger. William Powell: The Life and Films. McFarland, 2014.
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