


If you are looking for a reason to watch Moran of the Marines today, you’re likely either a silent film completionist or you’re on a scavenger hunt for Jean Harlow’s earliest screen moments. For everyone else, this is a tough sell. It’s a movie that feels like it was made by people who were very tired of the 1920s and ...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Frank R. Strayer

Victor Heerman
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"If you are looking for a reason to watch Moran of the Marines today, you’re likely either a silent film completionist or you’re on a scavenger hunt for Jean Harlow’s earliest screen moments. For everyone else, this is a tough sell. It’s a movie that feels like it was made by people who were very tired of the 1920s and just wanted to get to the 1930s already. It’s a military comedy that isn’t quite funny enough, and a drama that doesn't have the weight to make you care about the stakes in China. ..."
Sam Mintz, Agnes Brand Leahy, Ray Harris, George Marion Jr., Herman J. Mankiewicz, Linton Wells
United States


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