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Walter Huston, Pat O'Brien, Kay Johnson, Constance Cummings, Gavin Gordon ... see more see more... , Robert Ellis , Jeanne Sorel , Walter Walker , Berton Churchill , Arthur Hoyt , Edward Martindel , Edwin Maxwell , Robert E. O'Connor , Anderson Lawler , Sterling Holloway , Harry Holman , Ralph Lewis , Pat O'Malley

Bank president Thomas Dickson (Walter Huston) has instituted a lending policy that shows great faith in ordinary people but which also irritates his board of directors, as does his claim that an incre... read more read more...ased money supply will help end the Depression. Elsewhere in the bank, criminal Dude Finlay (Robert Ellis) has coerced head cashier Cluett (Gavin Gordon) into cooperating with a robbery by threatening to reveal Cluett as a habitual gambler. Dickson's neglected wife Phyllis (Kay Johnson), upset that Thomas has forgotten their anniversary, agrees to go out with Cluett, but they're spotted by head teller Matt Brown (Pat O'Brien). Matt goes to Cluett's apartment and convinces Phyllis to leave with him just as the robbery takes place back at the bank. Because he was responsible for locking the vault, Matt is assumed to be in league with the robbers, and he's arrested. News of the robbery leads to frantic depositors demanding their money back from the bank; Dickson cannot talk them out of it, and the bank is running out of money. This gives the board of directors the leverage over Dickson that they've been seeking, and they try to force his resignation. ~ Bill Warren, Rovi

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81% liked it

424 ratings

Unrated, 1 hr. 19 min.

Directed by: Frank Capra

Release Date: August 15, 1932

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  • February 8, 2009
    [font=Century Gothic]In "American Madness," the board of directors of the Union National Bank are trying to foist a merger on the bank president George Dickson(Walter Huston), fearing a lack of funds. Dickson flatly refuses, saying that money is badly needed to be in circulation... read more to keep businesses running which keep the economy healthy.(Sound familiar anyone?) For men like Dickson, it is a matter of faith which he has also shown in hiring men like Matt Brown(Pat O'Brien) who has a criminal record. At the same time, one of his other employees, Cluett(Gavin Gordon), has developed a serious gambling problem and gotten in desperate trouble with some gangsters. Dickson's dedication to his bank is admirable but it is constantly frustrating for his wife(Kay Johnson) who is afraid he may have forgotten their anniversary again.[/font]
    [font=Century Gothic][/font]
    [font=Century Gothic]"American Madness" is a breezy and fast-talking movie that a like a lot of Frank Capra's other movies is couched in a very civic minded message that asks the public to be calm and to have faith in troubled times, because there are plenty of good men like George Dickson out there. Except this is one of Capra's better films with a climax that has to be seen to be believed.[/font]
  • April 6, 2011
    good stuff 4/6/11 re-watch this early capra post it happened one night follows with a light drama that moves along capra style
  • February 4, 2010
    A film that shows our current banking situation is nothing new. A well made film that shows the skill of Frank Capra as a director.
  • December 7, 2007
    I last saw Walter Huston (father of John Huston, who directed The Maltese Falcon--the version that matters--and had his father in an uncredited cameo in it) as Jerry Cohan, father of George M. Cohan in Yankee Doodle Dandy. As with most films from those few decades, ... read moreI feel there was definitely a sense that even the actors around the stars had honed their craft on the stage for a long time, even if they were making their film debuts. Here he is the clear star as Thomas Dickson, who runs the Union National Bank, under pressure from his Board of Directors to merge with the New York Trust and resign, saving them his heart-stopping loans made on faith.

    Under him are people like Matt Brown (Pat O'Brien, Jerry Connolly to me, priestly friend of Rocky Sullivan in Angels with Dirty Faces), who Dickson hired after Brown robbed him and appointed Chief Teller, and Cyril Cluett (what a name had Gavin Gordon's character), a man who has a large gambling debt to gangster Dude Finlay. Matt is in love with Helen (Constance Cummings), secretary to Dickson, and the two witness Cluett's attempts to woo Dickson's wife Phyllis (Kay Johnson). Now a convergence of events--Dude Finaly calling in Cluett's debt, Cluett's attempts to start an affair, Matt's criminal history, a robbery, a rumour, the Board, headed by Clark (Edwin Maxwell) trying to pull Dickson out of the bank--leads to a pretty tense, constantly engaging battle against the odds.

    Is this a Capra movie? Well, it's my first, so I couldn't say with any sense of expertise, but based on what I've always understood of Capra's work, my tentative response is actually a pretty firm "yes." Dickson is a man who has faith in other men--he says he makes his loans based on hunches and impressions of the character of people. He refuses to hold onto massive cash amounts and refuse loans to people who don't currently have anything to show for their ideas or needs, he is in some ways naïve when it comes to this, and certainly focused. Phyllis is only tempted away from him because she feels ignored, passed over for Dickson's work at the bank. He would never suspect this, though, because of the faith he has in people. However, in what I understand to be Capra style, we can see from the beginning that Matt is a trustworthy character, through and through, taking Dickson's appreciation of him to heart and feeling like he is a surrogate father.

    The title certainly refers to the sort of madness that seems almost uniquely American. Dickson feels that money should be cycled out in loans and the like because keeping it in circulation promotes the national economy by keeping things moving and not allowing the stagnation of keeping it all held in bank vaults. This is certainly relevant to the time period--the Great Depression--and is, while perhaps idealistic, is at least portrayed as the right idea to have. Yet, all the same, the telephone operator for the bank who we open on tells others, through gossip on one of her lines, about the robbery, leading to a fantastically filmed run on the bank for everyone to withdraw the funds they feel are now unsafe, a masterful scene following of jump cutting between phone calls of everyone passing and exaggerating the rumour until a massive tide of people swarms over the bank, the throngs yelling at each other and the bank itself as they all rush to guarantee their financial safety--or so they think--all because of a rumour, instead making their own problems worse.

    This is a short movie (around 76 minutes) but is absolutely filled, feels no excess and no loss. As is typical of earlier talking films, lines are crammed into short spaces, actors prattling on rapidly but with great emotion, speaking at speeds that are real but not overly natural, the entire experience sort of like a hyper-speed stage production While I've mentioned many a time that I prefer a natural approach and tend to be most impressed by it, the interesting thing about films from the 1930s and 1940s is that they have this lightning patter, yet the skill and experience of all the actors somehow brings a natural element to it all the same--emotion is clear and true, and manages to mask the unrealistic speed of everyone's speech, managing then to keep the pace rapid and suspenseful with these speeds without violating our suspension of disbelief. An extra note beyond the main cast I've already mentioned belongs to Robert Emmett O'Connor as the Police Inspector who comes to investigate the robbery, a smart man, a quick man, a perceptive man, alternately pleading and demanding where appropriate.

    I am fantastically happy with this first Capra experience. It brought a smile to my face and made my eyes tear up a little--admittedly I sometimes seem to be more vulnerable to this than other times, but this time it was a sort of happy appreciation of human decency. And that's actually the point, I guess. I don't think movies have to be happy, or have to be dark, or hate one or the other, I just think they should live up to what they set out as. They may set out as one and build themselves into the other, but it should be natural, whichever--or whatever--it is, and so I think the people who hate Capra's appreciation of the little guy winning out and people proving that maybe, just maybe they're decent can go to hell. Sometimes I want to have a little faith in humanity. I don't think it's anymore realistic to say we're all bad than it is to pretend we're all good--and I didn't get the feeling Capra was implying we were all good, even if good has some chance at winning out. Cluett was no great shakes as a person (though he had a little decency every now and then), and the maddened, ignorant mob was portrayed as selfish, egocentric, callous, negligent and eventually even hypocritical.

    Fantastic stuff. I can't wait to see more.

Critic Reviews


Dennis Schwartz
August 25, 2005
Dennis Schwartz, Ozus' World Movie Reviews

Though preachy, Capra's film zips along at breakneck speed and always pleases. Full Review

Ken Hanke
November 20, 2003
Ken Hanke, Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)

Early Capra has the extra bonus of documenting its time.

Mordaunt Hall
August 8, 2006
Mordaunt Hall, New York Times

Click to read the article Full Review

Dave Kehr
January 1, 2000
Dave Kehr, Chicago Reader

Click to read the article Full Review

Emanuel Levy
August 1, 2005
Emanuel Levy, EmanuelLevy.Com

No review available.

Geoff Andrew
February 9, 2006
Geoff Andrew, Time Out

Click to read the article Full Review

May 24, 2003
Film4

Click to read the article Full Review

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