vertical_align_top
The Big Parade

The Big Parade (1925) (Movie)

EDIT
17 comments · 5 likes
favorite
 
Please login to post content on this page.
  • 2 weeks ago
    Silent American war drama films
    List, 65 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • cboothe977 posted a photo
    Apr 11
    Press Enter to post.
  • add_box
    Please be the first person to add a timeline event for this topic!

    Quotes 7

    add_box
    • format_quote Bull: (Having - along with Slim - broken into the wine cellar under the farmhouse, where together they imbibe lots of wine) Can you imagine? Some guys was saps enough to join the Navy!
      edit

    Trivia 6

    add_box
    • stars  Studio electrician Carl Barlow died during production when he slipped and fell off a platform.
      edit
    • stars  Is the highest grossing silent film of all time, making $22 million during its worldwide release
      edit
    • stars  After director King Vidor complained to MGM production chief Irving Thalberg that he was tired of shooting pictures that played in theaters for just one week, he told Thalberg about a new kind of realistic war movie he had envisioned. Thalberg was enthusiastic about Vidor's vision, and tried to buy the rights to the hit Broadway play "What Price Glory?" co-written by Maxwell Anderson and World War I Marine veteran Laurence Stallings. Since the rights to the popular anti-war play had already been acquired, Thalberg hired Stallings to come to Hollywood and write a screenplay for the new, realistic war picture that Vidor had dreamed about making. Stallings came up with "The Big Parade", an anti-war story that dispensed with traditional concepts of heroism, focusing instead on a love story between a Yank soldier and a French girl. After Vidor completed principal photography (at a cost of $200,000, approximately $2.1 million in 2003 dollars), Thalberg took the rough cut and previewed it before live audiences in Colorado. The audiences responded favorably, and Thalberg decided to expand the scope of the picture, as Vidor had created a war picture without many scenes of war. He had Vidor restage the famous marching army column sequence with 3000 extras, 200 trucks and 100 airplanes. After Vidor moved on to another project, Thalberg had other battle scenes shot by director George W. Hill. The result was a major hit that proved to be MGM's most profitable silent picture.
      edit
    • stars  The U.S. War Department - the predecessor of the Department of Defense - loaned the film's producers over 200 army trucks, approximately 4,000 soldiers and over 100 airplanes for use in the film.
      edit
    • stars  The movie was a huge hit. When MGM discovered that a clause in director King Vidor's contract entitled him to 20% of the net profits, studio lawyers called a meeting with him. At the meeting, MGM accountants played up the costs of the picture while downgrading the studio forecast of its potential success. Vidor was persuaded to sell his stake in the film for a small sum. The film ran for 96 weeks at the Astor Theater and grossed $5 million (approximately $50 million in 2003 dollars) domestically by 1930, making it the most profitable release in MGM history at that point. Said Vidor, "I thus spared myself from becoming a millionaire instead of a struggling young director trying to do something interesting and better with a camera."
      edit
    Show more expand_more
  • Nov 6, 2024
    English-language war drama films
    List, 612 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • Aug 18, 2024
    Surviving American silent films
    List, 1,072 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • Jul 29, 2024
    1925 war films
    List, 7 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • Jul 28, 2024
    1925 drama films
    List, 411 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • 1 year ago
    Films scored by William Axt
    List, 154 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • over a year ago
    Silent war drama films
    List, 100 members
    Like · like_pink 1
    Press Enter to post.
  • over a year ago
    Silent American drama films
    List, 5,195 members
    Press Enter to post.
  • over a year ago
    1920s English-language films
    List, 5,765 members
    Press Enter to post.
Release Date 5 November 1925
Tagline King Vidor's PICTURIZATION of LAURENCE STALLINGS' GREAT STORY
Genre Drama
Romance
War
view all »
pencil

The Big Parade (1925)

Directed by King Vidor

Genres - Drama, War | Sub-Genres - Anti-War Film, War Drama | Run Time - 141 min. | Countries - USA |

Synopsis by Hal Erickson

The Big Parade was designed as a modest programmer concerning one young man's disillusionment in the face of war. When the MGM executives took a look at the projection-room rushes, they gave director King Vidor the go-ahead to film an all-out "spectacular", which ended up running 13 reels and costing a then-astronomical $382,000. Shorn of his matinee-idol mustache, John Gilbert is perfect as an all-American-boy who signs up for World War I service, dreaming of adventure and glory. The first half of the film is taken up with the jocular byplay between Gilbert and his army buddies Tom O'Brien and Karl Dane. These scenes seem to take forever, especially to those awaiting the big battle sequences that the MGM advertising copy had promised. But Vidor's slow buildup had its purpose; by lulling the audience into complacency, the director was able to shock the viewers with the horrors of war as suddenly and effectively as the doughboys had been shocked back in 1918. Gilbert survives the war, but returns home minus one leg (the film's script was written by Laurence Stallings, himself a war vet and amputee). MGM head Louis Mayer was terrified that the scenes of a crippled Gilbert would offend his fans, so he ordered that "protection" footage be shot with Gilbert being merely wounded, but with both legs intact. So powerful were the climactic scenes between Gilbert and his parents, however, that not one preview audience ever demanded that the alternate ending be shown. The film's many highlights includes the cute scene in which Gilbert teaches French girl Renee Adoree how to chew gum; the famous shot of Adoree desperately clinging to Gilbert as he and his fellow soldiers march to the front; the chilling Belleau wood sequence, in which the soldiers, walking stealthily amidst the tall trees, are picked off one by one by snipers; and the heart-rending reunion sequence, in which Gilbert's mother (Claire McDowell) embraces her amputee son as she flashes back to the time that he took his first steps. The only concession to MGM formula was in having Gilbert depicted as a wealthy young man, living in a mansion the size of Rhode Island. Though its original impact has been blunted by years of imitations, The Big Parade remains an unforgettable movie experience.

http://www.allmovie.com/movie/the-big-parade-v5451

View More
Desktop | Mobile
Terms of Use · Copyright · Privacy
© 2006-25, FamousFix · loaded in 0.44s