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The Big
Parade (1925)
In director King Vidor's silent war-drama epic and
romance, a major, high-grossing blockbuster at the time, and influential
on future war films such as All Quiet on
the Western Front (1930) -
its screenplay was written by World War I veteran Laurence Stallings
who also suffered a leg wound and amputation, similar to the lead
character in the film (dashing silent screen idol John Gilbert).
It was the first war film of its kind to tell its realistic story
from the viewpoint of the GI, when the war (from only 7 years earlier)
was still fresh in everyone's mind.
The Big Parade was the first
realistic war drama which has served ever since as an archetypal
model for all other war films. It was the first big box-office success
of the newly-formed MGM Studios - and possibly the most profitable
silent film of all time - it helped bring back the popularity of
war films in the late 20s. At its time, it was the largest grossing
silent film ever - with a combination of humor, romance, suspense,
war-time action, and tragedy:
- in the film's opening, James "Jim" Apperson
(John Gilbert) was introduced as the indolent, spoiled son of wealthy
factory owner ("chief of industry") and businessman Mr. Apperson
(Hobart Bosworth) - regarded a disappointment to his family; he
was planning to be married to upper-class fiancee Justyn Reed (Claire Adams)
- after war was declared, Jim faced a decision about
whether he should enlist to fight in World War I; his fiancee was overjoyed: "Aren't you
thrilled that we're going to war?...You'll look gorgeous in an
officer's uniform! I'll love you more than ever then"; (her wishes
were never fulfilled!); a title card described the rise of patriotism
in the nation: "What a thing is patriotism! We go for years not
knowing we have it. Suddenly - Martial Music!...Native flags!...Friends
cheer!...and it becomes life's greatest emotion"
- Jim's patriotic fervor increased as he attended
a recruitment parade, tapping his left foot in rhythm to the marching
band - it would be the leg that he would lose during the war effort; idealistic
American soldier "Jim" Apperson decided to join his
friends who urged him to join and go "over there"
- Jim's parents were proud to see Jim enlist
and enter boot-camp training, where he became friends with two
working-class buddies: a tall and lanky Southerner - construction
laborer Slim Jensen (Karl Dane) and Bowery bartender Michael "Bull"
O'Hara (Tom O'Brien) from the Bronx
Jim's Two Working-Class War Buddies
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Michael "Bull" O'Hara (Tom O'Brien)
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Slim Jensen (Karl Dane)
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- during
the Great War in 1917, the US joined the war effort in Europe; there
was a spectacular view of 200 trucks and hundreds of troops moving
up to the front in a single-file "big parade" on a dirt road, and another view of soldiers
marching together
- Jim was deployed to the front
lines in the Marne area of France; he first sighted French-speaking
peasant girl Melisande (Renee Adoree), a farmer's daughter in the
village of Champillon; she was highlighted in a circular
peep-hole in a barrel on his head; shortly later as some of James'
soldier friends bathed in a primitive shower apparatus, she caught
his eye watching the naked men - and they introduced themselves to
each other with a hand-shake; with cryptic French, he offered her "a
little walk" to a nearby tree: ("Voo...and...
me...vooley voo...take....little....petite....walk?");
he took her arm and hand and led her as they strolled along
French Peasant Girl Melisande (Renee Adoree):
A Growing Romance with GI James Apperson (John Gilbert) - Beginning
with a Handshake
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- later, in a marvelous, fully pantomimed, classic
scene (filmed in a single, uninterrupted take after they sat down
on a bench beside her front steps), James introduced Melisande
to American chewing gum (she swallowed it with one large gulp and
then politely refused his offer of a second piece); with broken
French, he boldly and awkwardly attempted to tell her of his love,
and she reciprocated the attempt in broken English, and resisted
his advances for a kiss
- however, during their eight o'clock date
that evening, when they both retreated to the wine cellar, in candlelight,
he pointed out what he wanted to say to her about his love for
her from his French primer; she beamed a smile back at him and
they both shared a delicious, long kiss; when they rendezvoused
later, their passion was released in a flood of kisses by the stream's
edge under a tree
The Classic Farewell Sequence
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- in the film's memorable farewell sequence, Melisande
desperately looked for James as his military platoon was departing
from her village; when she spotted him, she ran into his arms as
he jumped off a truck; they wildly embraced and peppered each other
with kisses - framed in close-up; earnestly, he vowed to return
to her in the touching scene: "I'm coming back! - Remember
- - - I'm coming back!"; as he was dragged into the tail end
of a truck, Melisande held on firmly to his left leg - refusing
to let go; she desperately hung onto a chain dangling off the vehicle,
trying to halt the inevitable and defy both time and fate; when
she wouldn't let go, she was dragged alongside the procession until
she couldn't hold on any longer
- James tossed her his wristwatch, his dogtags, and
one extra shoe (symbolic of the fact that he would later lose his
leg and no longer need the shoe), and then sprayed her with two-handed
kisses; she stood and watched the truck disappear - holding his
shoe to her bosom; the passing vehicles and clouds of dust enveloped
her - and then subsided; in the middle of the road, she sank to
her knees with her head bowed
- there was a harrowing and realistic battle scene
of the soldiers' chilling march into enemy machine gun sniper fire
at Belleau Wood
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US Troops Mowed Down by German Sniper Fire While Marching
Through Belleau Wood
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- during trench warfare, the soldiers sought shelter
from bombs and tear gas in shell holes, and were forced to wear gas masks
- Slim was selected for a dangerous night mission to
destroy a German cannon; after wriggling on the ground and successfuly
blowing up the cannon nest, Slim was ambushed and lethally wounded
on his return when his position was illuminated by a flare, and he
repeatedly moaned and called out for help; impatient for Slim's return
and unable to remain calm, Jim cried out in despair: "Orders! Orders!
Who the hell is fighting this war - men or orders? I came to fight,
not to wait and rot in a lousy hole while they murder my pal!"; Slim
was found dead by his grieving friends
- slightly later, Bull was also killed and James was
seriously wounded in the leg, and then became trapped in a shell
hole with the young dying German soldier (Arthur H. Allen) whom he
had bayoneted; in a moving moment, Jim offered him a cigarette before he died
- while in a makeshift infirmary set up near the village
of Champillon, Jim escaped on crutches to
desperately search for Melisande, but failed in finding her in the
evacuated and destroyed village
- after the war was declared over, Jim returned home
as a wounded veteran; in his homecoming scene, he appeared missing
a leg; his parents responded with a shocked reaction (especially
his mother who recalled him as a healthy baby boy with two legs);
as a grown-man now changed by the war, he found it difficult to readjust
and return to his old life with his brother Harry and his ex-fiancee Justyn
- in the film's finale, amputee
Jim returned to Europe at war's end for a long-overdue reunion in France
with Melisande; she was viewed tearfully chewing
gum and thinking of him as she took a break from plowing a field next
to her mother; she noticed a man hobbling along a distant ridge toward
her; she left her plow and raced forward, stopped, and suddenly with
a flow of emotion realized who it was; she ran down a dirt embankment,
across and field, and toward a long road, to greet Jim; he picked up
his pace, while struggling to walk with a cane and wooden leg, while
calling out: "MELISANDE!"; she waved and shouted back: "JIMMEE!"; they
joyously embraced and kissed each other to end the film
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"Jim" With His Encouraging Fiancee Justyn Reed
(Claire Adams)
Jim's Patriotism - Symbolized by Tappling His Left Foot
During a Recruitment Parade - The Leg He Would Lose in the War
American GIs Trudging on Foot to the War Front in Europe
During WWI
James "Jim" Apperson (John Gilbert) at the War Front
Jim's Chewing Gum Lesson and Kiss for French-Speaking
Melisande
US Homecoming: James' Injury (Missing Leg)
Tearful Melisande in a French Field
Melisande Pointing Out to Her Mother A Man Limping Along a Distant Ridge
Melisande Running Toward the Man - And Suddenly Realizing Who It Was
"MELISANDE!"
"JIMMEE!"
Their Long-Awaited Reunion in France
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