
Another of the "run-away" productions made by Columbia in Canada in the mid-30's designed to either comply with or to circumvent the British Quota Law of the period, with Walter C. Kelly and Edith Fellows the only American citizens in the credited cast.

Look, if you are looking for a masterpiece of cinema, you are in the wrong harbor. Tugboat Princess is one of those movies that exists mostly because of some weird 1930s tax law about British quotas. It has that specific, grainy feeling of a production that was made just to fill a screen, not to win awards.You should p...


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

David Selman

Edgar Jones
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"Look, if you are looking for a masterpiece of cinema, you are in the wrong harbor. Tugboat Princess is one of those movies that exists mostly because of some weird 1930s tax law about British quotas. It has that specific, grainy feeling of a production that was made just to fill a screen, not to win awards.You should probably watch this if you have a weird fascination with old-school melodrama or if you just want to see how Edith Fellows tries to carry a whole movie on her shoulders. If you need..."
Robert Watson, Dalton Trumbo, Isadore Bernstein
Canada

